English, asked by singaradhindsa001, 6 months ago

what Question rises in peot mind

Answers

Answered by leishasri
0

Explanation:

what is the lesson?

and which class is it

Answered by atharvsingh01
1

Answer ::::::

I think that the answer to such a poem and a reflection of it will have to be personally based off of one's interaction with the text. My guess is that some start can be given here. One of the most pressing elements in the speaker's mind is the idea that Tintern Abbey represents both place and state of being in the world. Wordsworth's sensation and his own understanding of Tintern Abbey is one where time seems to be reconfigured. The poem opens with him standing in a location that was visited five years ago and through the "mind's eye," he is able to redesign past and present into one moment. It is the subjective sensation that allows him to do this and these thoughts seem to dominate throughout the poem. Wordsworth's idea of being able to refer to Tintern Abbey as more than a place but actually a state of being in the world helps to enhance this notion, an idea that something in the present can operate as a place of reference in the future. Tintern Abbey represents the purity of the individual experience, one where the pace of the modern day cannot take away from its subjective recognitions.

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