Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Tintern Abbey

Powerful Essays
1639 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Tintern Abbey
Tintern Abbey: Seeing into the Life of Things What does Wordsworth see when he 'sees into the life of things?'; Remember that in the lines leading up to his portrayal of the 'blessed mood'; that gives him sight, Wordsworth has been pointing to the power of human memory and reflection. And the importance of memory and reflection are made plain by the shifting time perspectives in the poem. The poem begins with the speaker on the banks of the Wye for the first time in five years. At first the poet emphasizes the way in which his present experience is similar to that of five years ago. More than once he tells us that 'again'; he has certain experiences in this secluded spot, a place that is evidently a refuge for him. He then tells how he has though of 'these beauteous forms' at many difficult times since he was last at this spot, five years before. At these moments, his recollections of his time on the banks of the Wye seems to lift his spirits and restore him. He then points to what might, at first glance, seem to be impossible: 'unremembered pleasures.'; How can it make sense to say that we recall 'unremembered pleasures';? If they are unremembered, how can we be thinking about them? This strange phrase might point to some vague pleasant experience in the past, one that we cannot clearly name. But it could also mean that we can now remember pleasures that previously not only unremembered but actually unnoticed. The thought of an unnoticed pleasure might seem strange as well. But is it so odd to think that, in memory, our pleasurable experiences take on new meaning and greater substance than they had at the time? Pleasant experiences are often over quickly or happen in a rush. We are so caught up in the experience that we can't attend to all that is happening to us. Or, in some instances, when we are in the middle of some experience, we cannot grasp just what makes it special or wonderful. For what some experience means to us depends upon what came before it and, even more, what will follow from it. And, in the middle of an experience, we may forget what lead up to it and cannot know what will come of it. It is only in retrospect that we can revel in the experience, appreciate aspects of it that we could not at the moment, and grasp the meaning of it for our lives. Then Wordsworth points to the way in which our past experiences affect the way we live with others. Why are the 'best portion of a good man's life'; 'His little, nameless, unremembered, acts of kindness and of love?'; Because they are uncalculated and unmotivated by self-concern. They come so freely from us that it is only in retrospect that we recognize them for what they were. However they are the true measure of what we are, and what we are is determined in large part by what we remember of our lives, by the shape we give our lives in memory. It is the recollection of good memories, the naming of nameless pleasures, that help make us the kind of people who commit nameless unremembered acts of kindness and love. So the mood that leads the author to see into the life of things begins with recollection and memory, of pleasures of good deeds. But these memories occur in what seems like and otherwise dreary time for the author, when he is weary and lonely. They occur in times when the 'fever of the world'; has burdened the author, when his worries have lead him to fruitless endeavors, and when he has suffered from the 'evil tongues,'; 'rash judgments,' and 'the sneers of selfish men'; he points to later in the poem. Memories of the Wye raise the author's spirits, and distance him from the concerns of his daily life. The author is able to step back and look at himself from above. The vision he presents of the soul leaving the body is not one of death but of release from the concerns of every day life. The author's soul floats above his body. From that distance, the tensions of daily life is diminished, and replace by joy. This joy comes in no small part from the escape from every day worries. But perhaps it is also a joy in the author's own powers to shape his experience of the world. For the poet has a further insight, one that comes from reflection on the very experience of the power of memory to 'lift the burdens'; upon him. That is, the author is now thinking not about the Wye, or about his memories of the Wye, or about how these memories have lifted his spirits and shaped his life. Rather he is thinking about the human abilities that allow memory and reflection to have this effect. In doing this he grasps two important features of his own powers. First, he sees just how his power of reflection and memory can keep him from being dragged down into the pain and despair of daily life. The pleasure he received from his experience on the banks of the Wye are not limited to that time and place but are always available. And the pain and worries of daily life can be diminished and put in their place by gaining some distance and perspective from them. Second he grasps that these very experiences are not just due to the power of nature over him. As he points out later in the poem, when he was younger 'nature…to me was all in all.'; This does not mean that nature was 'all in all'; when he was young but that he experienced it as 'all in all.'; What he has come to realize is that the effect of nature upon him depends upon what he brings to nature. For he has seen that the pleasures he receives upon reflection on his experience at the banks of the Wye are different and possibly even greater that those he had at the time of the actual experience. Later in the poem, the author recognizes that half of the experience comes from his eye, while the other half comes from nature. That is, what has such an effect on him is not nature pure and simple but nature as filtered through his own 'language of the sense.';From this green earth; of all the mighty worldOf eye, and ear, --both what they half create,And what perceive; well pleased to recognizeIn nature and the language of the sense, Seeing into the life of things, then, is seeing into the power of human reflection, which in turn rests on our capacity for recollection. Thus the form of the poem the constant shifting of the author's attention from one period of time to another;portrays the experiences and recognition's that is the subject matter of the poem. It is in this shifting of attention that the author and welcome to distance ourselves from those aspects of our lives that trouble us and turn to other experiences that nurture us and give us hope for the future. Moreover, this power of reflection gives us the ability to give shape not just to our experiences of the past but, also, to our expectations of the future. The author has learned that what he becomes is, in large part, the result of what he chooses to make of himself. Making oneself, for Wordsworth, however, comes not in building a career or seeking riches, but in coming to a better understanding of one's own nature and situation. This gives the author tremendous power over his life, but also a great deal of responsibility for it as well.
Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey is a poem by William Wordsworth that has a strong, central theme of romanticism. Wordsworth was the pioneer poet in the field of literary philosophy which is now called romanticism. This poem reflects a romantic theme in two main ways. First is that throughout the passage of the entirety of the poem, there is a stressed view point upon imagination and remembrance, and most notably lots of emotion involved in the poem. The second way this poem has a romantic theme is that the poet, Wordsworth, describes/exhibits his love of nature through his many revelations and remembering of memories. Continued, this poem shows lots of imagination and therefore romanticism by the way Wordsworth stresses memories. In the beginning of the poem he remembers the abbey from five years ago and he is reliving the memories. Then he describes how he perceives and longs for the same degree of nature in those five years since he has returned. Later in the poem, the author rejoices in the fact that he can fuel his imagination with new memories of this trip. In terms of the application of emotion, and therefore romanticism, Wordsworth uses many personal adjectives to describe nature around him. Rather than dote upon the size of the mountains and the age rings and the disrepair of the abbey, he takes an alternative viewpoint and uses emotions to show his joy for these things. The author is happy and it shows in the poem, this shows the romantic theme. The romantic theme of the poem also applies in a more simplistic manner in the way that the author longs for and enjoys everything about nature around him. As was noted in the previous sentence, the surrounding area makes him happy. In the poem Wordsworth says, he still loves nature, still loves mountains and pastures and woods, for they anchor his purest thoughts and guard the heart and soul of his "moral being."

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Indeed, through individual transformations, subsequent sensations of timelessness and stability demonstrate the restorative ability of landscapes. Harwood’s autobiographical poetry “At Mornington” conveys her personal reflection of childhood innocence depicted in her biblical interaction with a remembered landscape – “As a child I could walk on water – the next wave, the next wave”. However, the interruptive aposiopesis in “Memories of childhood iridescent, fugitive as light in a sea wet shell” signifies both Harwood’s nostalgic connection with the landscape, and the ability of nature to provoke a depressing contemplation of life, evident in the pessimistic immersion “among avenues of the dead”. The construction of a pumpkin as “a parable of…

    • 235 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gwen Harwood Essay Example

    • 1185 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Memories and meandering thoughts, related to personal experiences, are explored throughout At Mornington where the persona shifts between the past and present and dreams and reality. This is similar to Father and Child where Barn Owl is set in past test and Nightfall is set in the present, symbolic of appreciation and understanding of the complexities of life which the child learns. At Mornington opens with an evocation of an event from the persona’s childhood which establishes the temporary and ever changing nature of human life. Reflected through the shifts between past and present tense, the persona is attempting to use past experiences in order to appreciate the present and accept the future. The poem provides a reflective and personal point of view accompanied by the recurring motif of water which symbolises the persona’s transition from childhood to the acceptance of the inevitability of death. In the third stanza, the persona refers to a more recent past where she had seen pumpkins growing on a trellis in her friend’s garden. The action of the pumpkins is described as “a parable of myself” which allows the persona to reflect on the meaning and quality of her own life and existence. The metaphor between the pumpkin vine and the persona suggests that like the pumpkin, human…

    • 1185 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gunston Hall

    • 634 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Before I even got off the bus the beauty and amazement of Gunston Hall and all of the land that surrounded it caught me off guard. To start, there was so much land and George Mason once owned every bit of it. Next, when you actually approached Gunston Hall, you realized how breath taking it was. From the picturesque house with impressive woodwork in the front parlor all the way to the well kept gardens. Everything was perfect, but then it hit me. Who once made it so pretty, and how did it look from their point of view?…

    • 634 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The true beauty of this poem for me, and what makes it so enigmatic, is the mutual recognition in a person, between two moments past and future, of one's frame of mind at the other moment. We are so long in time, that such connections are very, very rare, and to have a moment of empathy with one's future or past self is both to gain a momentary insight into the nature of life and aging, and to momentarily gain a new internal context to how we perceive the aging of others, and what it really means to…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Carrie Fountain’s “experience” she discusses the idea of our ephemeral nature as humans. The poem begins with “When I think of everything I’ve wanted / I feel sick” (1-2), this illustrates how the things she wanted in the past no longer are of any interest to her. That although her past self “wanted so badly” (9) in the present she couldn’t care less. This is articulated further when she states, “Thank god time erases everything / in this steady impeccable…

    • 510 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “When to the sessions of sweet silent thought I summon up remembrance of things past, I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought, And with old woes new wail my dear times waste”…

    • 767 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “For the first time, it seemed, I understood the green glory of this acreage as something indifferent to human life and quite apart from the Victorian manse set upon it. The sun was not yet up and the grass was draped with a wavy net of mist, punctured here and there with glistening drops of dew. White apple blossoms had begun to appear in the old tree, and I read the pale light in the sky as the shy illumination of a world to which I had yet to be introduced”…

    • 891 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He awes us with his picturesque imagery of a ‘small cloud of cabbage-whites circles[ing] a bush’ and builds an atmosphere of serenity with the words ‘ the first [snow]flakes of the season spun over Brookline’ and one can only wonder how similarly reassuring these images are. With the words ‘they [the people of Beacon Street] had forgotten the miracle’, we feel angered, depressed and guilt-ridden thinking about man’s eternal pre-occupation therefore not having enough time for the miracles and wonders of the world and the same is justified when he says ‘their [butterflies’ and snowflakes’] element of joy was quickly forgotten’ and we can’t help but feel pity for those little creations of nature which beg for attention but get none. While this cocktail of pity and sorrow steadily develops from one side, his words ‘the leaves dimmed… that the flakes spun like ashes’ makes us first fearful of the darkness that is to come, afraid that we might have to go without warmth and light and then make us realize that we have bigger things to worry about like death and senescence (ashes, white hair and Arctic virginity of death). We do however, admire him for loving his land as much as he does (but before… in the sun) and he goes on to cheer us up with the prospect of having snowflakes on your eyelids and hair and looking out at gleaming sea scales in St. Lucia (white butterflies… in the sun) which fills us with warmth because this juxtaposition reminds us that even though we might be on this earth for a short time, good use of our time can be made.…

    • 320 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Harry Wood Analysis

    • 856 Words
    • 4 Pages

    7) What feelings does the poet’s description of Harry Wood’s house and yard cause you to have?…

    • 856 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the last phrase, “Rhyme hidden indeed a fragrance which gently out of still silent bud a moist eye calls forth,” the image of “rhyme” refers back to the melodies in the first phrase. One part that makes up this melody is the rhyme. This is a small part of his memory, and this small part of his memory silently remains with him in the…

    • 1548 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Journal

    • 353 Words
    • 2 Pages

    3. "Miller owns this field, Locke that, and Manning the woodland behind.” Unlike everyday humans eyes sees the world, Poets see the world with other eyes beyond the physical of an…

    • 353 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Frankenstein

    • 432 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “…I have owed to [these beauteous forms]/In hours of weariness, sensations sweet,/ Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart;/ And passing even into my purer mind,/ With tranquil restoration…” (Wordsworth 26-30).…

    • 432 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Emily Dickinson presents to readers a speaker who is rummaging her psychological frame while trying to understand her anguish. In the first stanza, Dickinson eliminates certain possibilities of what “it” could be (“it” being her mental condition), pointing out that it was certainly not death that stood her up because “the Dead, lie down”. She does this by using imagery related to death, night and corpses. The speaker is definitely confused about what she feels because she goes on to describe reasons why what she is feeling is not, rather than what it is, using metaphors. However, she does give good evidence as to why those could not be the cause of her current condition. For example, “It was not Night, for all the Bells/Put out their Tongues, for Noon”, here she gives a clear image of the time of day being the afternoon while the clock strikes 12 and the bells ring, therefore it was not the night time that had her feeling this way.…

    • 799 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Whitman makes a connection to something larger than himself of how the past and the future mirror each other. Every event around him is seen by him as "glories". While people appear to make the same crossing as him and see the same things, ( like the sunset and the tides ) they take it for granted that these things will exist even in a hundred years. This poem reminds us to reflect and appreciate what is around us. Our memories begin with the etchings of our experience. Whitman's poem slows the frames in our life…

    • 321 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    We can make history to what we want it to be by only telling stories of sophistication and enjoyment. These stories we choose to tell can unintentionally portray a false sense of our past.The poet coveys the idea that a photograph only allows you to see the emotion that was shown in the time frame of which that the photo was taken in. This is shown by using many language techniques such as personification, symbolism and pun to convey the idea of what is behind the smiles.…

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays