In this poem, Wordsworth explores the connection between childhood and nature. He argues that as children we have a pure connection to nature, but that fades as we become adults focused on other responsibilities. The poem is divided into 11 stanzas where Wordsworth describes his memories of childhood and nature, and laments the loss of that connection in adulthood. He believes we can find solace in recollecting our childhood memories of nature. The poem examines how humans change over time from being closely tied to nature as children to forgetting that connection as adults.
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Ode of Immortality
In this poem, Wordsworth explores the connection between childhood and nature. He argues that as children we have a pure connection to nature, but that fades as we become adults focused on other responsibilities. The poem is divided into 11 stanzas where Wordsworth describes his memories of childhood and nature, and laments the loss of that connection in adulthood. He believes we can find solace in recollecting our childhood memories of nature. The poem examines how humans change over time from being closely tied to nature as children to forgetting that connection as adults.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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AAALYSIS OF 1HE POEM:
" Intimations of Immortality"
In 1807 William Wordsworth published 'Poem in Two Volumes, in which we can Iind that poem, whose Iull-name is 'Ode: Intimations oI Immortality Irom Recollections oI Every Childhood. Many oI Wordsworth`s poems, including this, deal with the subjects oI childhood and the memory oI childhood in the mind oI the adult in particular, childhood`s lost connection with nature, which can be preserved only in memory. In this poem Wordsworth uses a lot oI imagination to get his point through to the reader. He wants us to be able to see what he sees and to Ieel what he Ieels. The structure oI this poem is unique in Wordsworth`s work, I mean, unlike his characteristically Iluid, natural spoken monologues, it is written in a songlike cadence with Irequent changes in rhyme scheme and rhythm. It is written in eleven variable ode stanzas with variable rhyme schemes, in iambic lines with anything Irom two to Iive stressed syllablesThe rhymes occasionally alternate lines: I 'There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream, the earth, and every common sight, to me did seem apparelled in celestial light, occasionally Iall in couplets: II 'Turn wheresoe`er I may, by night or day, and occasionally occur within a single line: 'But yet I know, where`er I go. II we analyse the title, we have to say that its Iull name is 'Intimations oI Immortality Irom recollections oI early childhood, although it is better known as 'Intimations oI Immortality. In this poem Wordsworth explains how humans change over time. In Iact, when we are a child we are connected with nature, but as we get old we tend to Iorget nature and become more interested in other responsibilities oI adulthood, and that connection with nature stays as recollections oI childhood in our memory. So, in my opinion I think that the title oI this poem is good and right, because reading it we can guess more or less about what we are going to be told in the poem; at least we can guess that the poem deals with recollections oI something about the childhood. As we have said beIore, the poem is divided in eleven stanzas, which we are going to explain one by one. In the first stan:a, the author says wistIully and sad that 'there was a time (childhood) when all oI nature seemed dreamlike to him ('Apparelled in celestial light). So, here what is described is the poet`s lamentation on not being able to see any more the glory and the Ireshness oI a dream that his childhood had ('The things which I have seen I now can see no more). In the second stan:a, he says that he still sees the good and beautiIul things oI nature: the rainbow coming, the rose, the moon, the sunshine... Nevertheless the author Ieels that a glory has passed away Irom the earth. In the third stanza, while listening to the bird`s sing in springtime and watching the young lambs leap and play, he suddenly becomes sad and IearIul ('To me alone there came a thought oI grieI); but this sadness doesn`t last too long, because the sound oI nearby waterIalls, the echoes oI the mountains. restored him to strength. He ends saying that all the earth is gay, because oI that he exhorts a shepherd boy to play around him. In the fourth stanza, he declares that is impossible to Ieel sad in such a beautiIul May morning, with children playing around him and among the Ilowers. Although, suddenly, he looks at a tree and a Iield which said to each other that something is gone ('both oI them speak oI something that is gone). The same is made by a pansy. Because oI that he asked himselI what has happened to appearance oI nature ('whither is Iled the visionary gleam? Where is it now, the glory and the dream?). In the fifth stanza, Wordsworth says that human beings are asleep and should Iorget important things ('Our birth is but a sleep and a Iorgetting). Moreover it is said that human beings live in a purer, more glorious realm beIore they enter the earth. He says that as children, we still retain some memory oI that place, which causes our experience oI the earth to be suIIused with its magic; but as the baby passes through boyhood and adulthood and into manhood, he sees that magic die. In the sixth stanza, the author declares that because oI earthly materials human beings tend to Iorget what is need in liIe ('Forget the glories he hath known, and that imperial palace whence he came). In the seventh stanza, the author is looking at a six years old boy, and imagines his liIe and the love that his parents Ieel Ior him. Wordsworth describes the way in which a young boy leaves nature, because he has to deal with adulthood and a whole diIIerent kind oI liIe. That is reIlected when he sees the boy playing with some imitated Iragment oI adult liIe ('little plan or chart, 'a weeding or a Iestival, 'a mourning or a Iuneral). At the end, the author says that all liIe is an imitation. In the eight stanza, the poet addresses the boy as iI he was a prophet oI the lost truth ('mighty prophet! Seer blest! On whom those truths do res). And, rhetorically asks him why he hurries toward an adult liIe oI custom and earthly Ireight, iI he has access to the glories oI his origins and to the pure experience oI nature. In the ninth stanza, the author goes back into memories oI his childhood , which grant him a kind oI access to that lost world oI innocence and instinct, to that world with nature. In the tenth stanza, aIter that thoughts he has become very happy, because oI that he urges the birds to sing, and urges all creatures to participate in what he says 'the gladness oI the May. Then, again, he is stricken by the thought that he I old now, but that sad doesn`t last too long because with the thought that he has been with nature all the years makes him happy again, because he has a lot oI recollections oI his childhood with the nature so, he can Ieel the joy like he Ielt beIore. In the Iinal stanza, Wordsworth claims that he will Iorever be in love with nature and all its beauty; and he will in love with it until the he dies.
So, what we can said aIter reading that poem is that Wordsworth believed that, upon being born, human beings move Irom a perIect, idealized realm into the imperIect, un-ideal earth. As children, some memory oI the Iormer purity and glory in which they lived remains, best perceived in the solemn and joyous relationship oI the child to the beauties oI nature. But as children grow older, the memory Iades, and the magic oI nature dies. Still, the memory oI childhood can oIIer an important solace, which brings with it almost a kind oI re-access to the lost purities oI the past. And the maturing mind develops the capability to understand nature in human terms, and to see in it metaphors Ior human liIe, which compensate Ior the loss oI the direct connection.
Finally, iI we talk about the characteristics oI Wordsworth, we can see that there are some oI them in that poem. Firstly, nature, in all its Iorms, was important to Wordsworth, who concentrates on the ways in which he responds and relates to the world. He uses his poetry to look at the relationship between nature and human liIe, and to explore the belieI that nature can have an impact on our emotional and spiritual livesThat Ieature is Iound in the poem, because in it is related the nature with the human being. Moreover, all the poem goes round nature. Secondly, Wordsworth saw imagination as a powerIul, active Iorce that works alongside our sense, interpreting the way we view the world and inIluencing how we react to events. He believed that a strong imaginative liIe is essential Ior our well-being. . We can see imagination in the poem when the tree are talking between each other, or when the pansy is also taking.
COACLUSIOA
Wordsworth`s poems initiated the Romantic era by emphasizing Ieeling, instinct, and pleasure above Iormality and mannerism. He gave expression to inchoate human emotion 'Intimations oI Immortality is one oI his most important works, together with 'The Prelude and 'Lyrical Ballads. The Ode deals with childhood`s lost connection with nature as human beings get old. That connection only can be preserved in memory. Talking about Wordsworth`s inIluences, we have to say that he not only inIluenced the people who worked with him, but also to some authors that presented their plays aIter Romanticism, such as Spencer, Calvert, Coleridge.
To end this essay about the poem 'Intimations oI Immortality, I want to give my opinion. I didn`t know that poem, and when I Iound it on the internet I thought that my essay had to be about it. I liked this poem, because I think that all that is said in it is true, at least Ior me. When we are children, we are innocent, we like to play, we haven`t got problems; but when we are adult, we have to deal with problems in the job, in the Iamily. because oI that we Iorget the good and beautiIul things oI our childhood. What more can I say? I just want to say that I recommend that poem to everybody, because it`s really interesting, beautiIul and because it is a masterpiece oI the Romantic English Literature