English, asked by rajputshilpa466, 4 months ago

write the theme of lines written in early spring and also write a brief note about the poet​

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Answered by Anonymous
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Explanation:

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"Lines Written in Early Spring" is English Romantic poet William Wordsworth's meditation on the harmony of nature—and on humanity's failure to follow nature's peaceful example. In the poem, written in 1798 and published in Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads, a speaker reclines in a lovely grove on a spring morning. The joy he perceives in the natural world, and his belief that his own soul is somehow intimately connected to that joy, leads him to mourn "what man has made of man"—in other words, the cruelty, selfishness, and fighting that characterize humanity. The poem argues that while humans are part of nature, they sure don't act like it.

Read the full text of “Lines Written in Early Spring”

“Lines Written in Early Spring” Summary

I heard a thousand interwoven notes of birdsong while I lay in a grove, where I was enjoying the kind of mood in which happy thoughts remind you of sad ones.

Nature connected my soul to all the beautiful creatures around me—and I felt terribly sad to think about what humanity has done to itself.

Periwinkles grew through bunches of primroses under the green trees, and I believe that all flowers find joy in the very air they breathe.

Birds hopped playfully around me. I can't know what they think, but to me, it looked like all of their tiny movements gave them a shiver of pleasure.

The budding branches spread out like opening fans to catch the breeze. In spite of myself, I have to believe that they were taking pleasure in life, too.

If my belief in all this natural joy is heaven-sent, and if all I've perceived here is part of Nature's divine plan, doesn't it make sense that I should be sad about what humanity has done to itself?

“Lines Written in Early Spring” Themes

Theme Humanity vs. Nature

Humanity vs. Nature

“Lines Written in Early Spring” presents nature as the spirit that moves every living thing. Nature unites all the creatures of the landscape in a shared sense of joy, making them part of one big, delighted entity. But as the speaker soaks up the lovely grove around him, he finds cause not just for celebration, but for grief; humanity, in his view, is indeed part of this natural splendor, but it sure hasn't been acting that way! Instead of following nature's example and existing in peace and harmony, people fight each other and destroy the natural environments in which they live. And in separating themselves from both the natural world and each other, the poem argues that human beings have lost their connection to the joy that is their birthright.

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