Friday, August 31, 2007

Nature and the Natural World

When I think of the natural world, I think of the animal kingdom, genetics, the mind, physics, evolution, my environment, etc. I think every poem, in one way or another, touches on the concept of the natural world. Wordsworth, Coleridge and Blake exemplify their ideas of the natural world through their poems.

"O Lady! We receive but what we give, And in our life alone does Nature live" (from Dejection: An Ode, Coleridge). He describes this woman's wedding garment afterward, and that all we are going to get out of life, our soul must put forward first. I think he tries to explain to us that we are only as good as we will allow ourselves to be. When he discusses losing his poetic creativity, he only recognizes that it is lost, because it was once there. Had he never experienced his imagination before, during his childhood or adolescence, would he have ever missed it in it's absence? In his world, he believes, the nature of the self and the soul is what guides him with spirit and power.

Wordsworth uses Lines to describe his nature, his environment. It begins with a pure descirption of the land below where he sits. He connects with his landscape concentrating on every detail of the cottages and woods below. On line 70, "Wherever nature led", he beings to tell about his basic evolution through life. He compares himself, or man, to rivers and streams, nature leading them wherever they may end up. Instead of seeking what we really want, sometimes we feel like we are guided by some other essence. Later he tells, "In nature and the language of the sense The anchor of my purest thoughts". Again, his thoughts and feelings are controlled by his natural world, nature.

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