History, asked by ss0498877, 1 month ago

In the poem 'Lines Written in Early Spring' which word conveys the idea 'make out or understand'? *
1 link
2 measure
3 trait
4 pleasant​

Answers

Answered by taranjeetkaur324
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Answered by rashich1219
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Lines Written in Early Spring

Explanation:

  • Wordsworth has a well-deserved reputation as a naturalist poet. Nature takes on a personality in his work, an almost supernatural energy that pervades all objects.
  • Wordsworth believed that being close to nature was the same as being close to God, and while other nature poetry were popular during the Romantic period, it is Wordsworth who comes to mind first.
  • The phrase "a thousand mingled notes" in the first quatrain alludes to the divinity of Nature, signifying an almost-pervasive presence of the natural, similar to God's power.
  • The second quatrain takes a break from Nature to reflect on the suffering that other humans have inflicted on one another since the dawn of time.
  • The poet, on the other hand, takes a moment to say that Nature is tied to mankind through the concept of a soul; that Nature's soul isn't all that different from humanity's; and that, despite what the rest of the world thinks, it is man's natural state to be near to Nature.
  • One of Wordsworth's main theories was that man's natural state was to be near to nature.
  • The existence of movement contrasts sharply with the motionless poet – it is nature that captures the reader's attention, and so much has been written about it that the speaker-poet is reduced to a non-entity.
  • He is absent from the poetry; he has no thoughts, personality, or ideas. His world is engulfed by nature's greater power.
  • ‘Have I not reason to grieve /what man has created of man?' Wordsworth concludes ‘Lines Written in Early Spring' with the same regret as earlier: ‘have I not reason to lament /what man has made of man?'
  • Throughout the poem, Nature makes an attempt to heal the poet-broken speaker's soul; yet, despite Nature's best efforts, the poet-spirits speaker's remain sad and low, negating the healing influence that Wordsworth said nature possessed.
  • It closes on a solemn, depressing note: nature, undisturbed by humanity's woes, carries on, while the human spirit, imprisoned in its hard cage of mortality and reason, is left behind to suffer in the human world.
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