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00206--Lines Composed Above Tintern Abbey by William Wordsworth[English Literature free notes]



The poem Tintern Abbey ranks among the finest and the most characteristic of Wordsworth’s works.  It sums up Wordsworth’s development and furnishes a sure criterion to evaluate his life and poetry.  Moreover, it marks the birth of a new age in the history of English poetry.  It is usual for Wordsworth to compose lyrics by recalling a scene observed weeks, months, or even years earlier.  In the poem Tintern Abbey he describes a second visit to the Wye valley after an interval of five years.  This provides the occasion for his statement that during all these years he has been bearing in mind the sights and sounds there as a balm to his troubled soul amid the fret and fever of life.  In seeking to explain how this can be, he gives us an autobiography in a nutshell, outlining the three successive phases of his love of nature. 

Wordsworth recalls how five years earlier he had made his previous visit to the beauty-spot round Tintern Abbey.  Now he sees again the familiar and lovely spot recognizing the pleasing murmurs of the mountain streams, the Wye flowing down the mountain side.

The poet sees the landscape rendered solemn and impressive by the steep sides of lofty hills in one of the most unfrequented and wild spot in Wales.  A holy inexplicable calm pervades the scene which seems to ascend to the heavens themselves.  From where he stands in the shade of a sycamore tree, he gets a general view of distant cottages, each standing in its own small plot of ground hidden amidst the green foliage of trees, bushes and creepers trailing to the very doors of the houses.  Wisps of smoke arise from the chimneys of the cottages, but as the latter are hidden behind a curtain of leaves and branches, the on-looker gets the impression of nomads or stray gypsies living in the open and cooking their food.  The poet even wonders if there could be some hermit’s cave nearby from which the lonely ascetic is preparing his simple food.  Thus amidst the profusion of nature, unbroken solitude and absence of human beings, the poet derives an almost religious and inspiring tranquility.


  Recognizing the familiar features of the landscape seen earlier, the poet feels a sense of joy, of release in the presence of congenial natural sights and sounds.  He thinks of the uneasiness and confusions generated by the cities.  During the last five years, memories of the abbey and the river have frequented him at times of distress and gloom, and miraculously cheered up his drooping spirits.  As often as his emotions were pained or his spirits dejected, he had only to recall the lovely scenes of the country round Tintern Abbey to feel refreshed and to be revived.  These contacts with Nature delighted his mind and strengthened his character.  From this the poet inferred that there must be some vital and secret connection between the spirit of nature and the cultivation of human feelings in the right direction. 

Over and above the chastening and strengthening of his moral and emotional aspects, the poet derived from the nature the power of looking into the mystery of life and finding the principle of unity and harmony underlying all creation.  By practicing a kind of yoga he attuned his mind and spirit to the mysterious working of a supreme presence all around him, he got rid of the frustrations and failures of life step by step, forgot the weight of the mortal body and became exalted in spirit and sensation until he saw nothing but a beneficent force brooding over all the universe of which he himself was a part.  Thus he came to unravel the mystery or riddle of existence itself.  It was indeed the triumph of spirit over flesh.  Thanks to this realization which enabled him to escape from the fever and fret of life, from the restrictions and artificialities of conventional society, into deep communication with the spirit of Nature herself as he felt it when he was in Tintern Abbey.

There are three stages in the evolution of his attitude to Nature.  The first stage is called the infant stage.  In this period he looked upon nature much as the rose looks upon its new-begun course of life.  This stage is of mere sensation, of the gratification of instincts and feelings without any attempt to analyze or sort them out. 

The second stage is that of adolescence. Love is the most turbulent and ecstatic manifestation of youth.  The poet’s attitude towards nature becomes that of a lover’s attitude to his mistress.  Just as in the presence of his beloved, or even at the mere thought of her, the lover’s entire body, feelings and mind become roused as with extreme rapture, so did the poet feel in the presence of “the sounding cataract”.  This is only symbolical, for the “sounding cataract” is but one manifestation of nature.   

The final and third phase of Wordsworth’s attitude happened when both the unreasoned and unanalyzed attitudes give place to the philosophic interpretation of the influence and essential attributes of Nature.  Wordsworth was able to find in the all pervading spirit of nature a full recognition of the sadness or pathos of human life with its countless trials and tribulations; this sadness was necessary for a proper integration of the higher faculties and active expression of a sublime and supreme spirit in nature.  This spirit was to be recognized in his own heart as well as in remote planets and worlds other than ours. To this all-pervading power of Nature Wordsworth owes the stimulation of his creative faculties as well as his power of enjoying the beauties of the manifested world.  He believes that all his good qualities are the results of his adoration of Nature.

Ultimately the poet connects his sister with this spiritual development.  The human element of the poem is strengthened by these references to his sister.  He sees in her what he was a few years ago.  He wishes that she may continue to be so for few more years and  then follow his path of evolution.