William Wordsworth was born April 7th, 1770, in Cockermouth, Cumberland. Wordsworth lived in luxury, until it was all taken away when he lost his mother at a young age and soon later loosing his father (Everett, Biography). Orphaned at a young age, he learned at an early age that every thing can be taken away within a blink on an eye. This led Wordsworth to understand the meaning …show more content…
I believe it to be such a remote place and so far from any kind of civilization that you can forget about petty drama and modern technology and think about things that really matter, and start to think about a time when the world was much simpler.
“The World is Too Much with Us” is very focused on nature; in fact, the central problem that Wordsworth is trying to make is that people are so consumed and caught up with the little things that they are no longer moved by nature. According to Wordsworth, mankind alienates itself from nature is a sign that there is a deeper problem, the destruction and loss of something important in our hearts. The speaker even says he would rather be a pagan, because as a pagan he would be able to see and hear something that is a lot more inspiring then what is really happening.
Wordsworth believes himself to have insight to the conflicts that exist between nature and humanity. The materialistic progress being made by mankind is not without consequence. The destruction of the world by human’s blindness will keep going on as Wordsworth has foreseen. The change Wordsworth hopes for will not come as a result of creativity by mankind, but as a disorder by humans in the form of a long term battle. This battle should bring forth a victory for humanity and the environment by stimulating a re-birth for this new and improved