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Lines Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey By William Wordsworth

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Free Essay Submitted by bignerds on 06/28/2008 08:11 PM

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  • Category: English
  • Words: 362
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Lines Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey By William Wordsworth

William Wordsworth is commonly regarded as the vanguard poet of the Romantic
movement in British literature. The son of a wealthy Cumberland attorney, his birth followed the
dawn of the English Industrial Revolution. Afforded an education not uncommon of the British
bourgeoisie, Wordsworth attended St. Johns College, Cambridge, studying literature and
rhetoric, prior to the advent of the French Revolution. Having fallen prey to his keen interest in
the excitement of French revolutionary ideology, Wordsworth spent the next several years in
France with his lover, Annette Vallon. He was heavily influenced by the works of the French
revolutionaries and was impressed with an intense desire to bring similar power and fervor to his
own work. A pioneer of free verse, Wordsworth sought to cast off all literary convention,
expressing often controversial political and religious opinions through his simply-written poetry
and prose. Wordsworths Lyrical Ballads became the consummate expression of the authors
vibrant and effulgent new style. Wordsworths most famous poem, Lines Composed a Few Miles
Above Tintern Abbey was included as the last item in his collection of Lyrical Ballads. The
poem expresses the authors nearly pantheistic love of nature and his longing for humanitys
eventual reunification with the natural world.
As Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey opens, we are met the narrator,
standing pensively on the Banks of the Wye river, revisited after five years absence. He is lost in
the bitter-sweet recollection of the bygone days of his youth, spent frolicking along its shores. He
describes a sacred place, a refuge from the storms of the outside world. He speaks almost
reverently of the scenes magnanimity and the thought of introspection that it inspires, explaining,
. . .Once again/ Do I behold these steep and lofty...

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