Topic > Wordsworth's Romantic style present in Tintern Abbey

Williamworth's “Tintern Abbey” is an ideal example of Romantic poetry. As the “Wordsworth Tintern Abbey” web page notes, this memoir was added to the end of his book Lyrical Ballads, as a spontaneous poem that formed while revisiting the Wye Valley with his sister (Wordsworth Tintern Abbey). His writing style incorporated all Romantic perceptions, such as nature, the ordinary, the individual, imagination and distance, which he used to his most creative extent to create distinctive memories of nature and emotion, centered on striking descriptions of his individual personality. reactions to these everyday, ordinary things. Tintern Abbey is just an ancient ruin (William). However, Everythingworth's poem Tintern Abbey becomes something little more than a ruin. His poetry recognizes the ordinary and transforms it into a spectacular memory, whose ordinary characteristics are its main models for Nature. As Geoffryy H. Hartman notes in his “Wordsworth Poetry 1787-1814,” “Everything in nature excites [Wordsworth] and renews in turn his sense of nature” (Hartman 29). "The Poetry of Williamworth" recalls a quote from the 1802 edition of the lyrical ballads of Toworth's Prelude which said "[he] believed that his fellow poets should 'choose incidents and situations of common life and relate or describe them. . in a selection of the language actually used by men" (Poetry). In the most superficial sense, his vision of Tintern Abbey is worth using as a platform or remembrance, however, this ordinary act of remembrance arouses in him a more profound in its elaboration in ". Tintern Abbey", he says "Because I have learned to look at nature, not as in the hour of reckless youth, but to often feel the silence, s...... middle of paper...... emotion, nature, and the imagination which he used as effective tools in the exploration of humanity and memory, in the hope of revealing the true temperament of the human individual, or the search for the ultimate nature, man, and so goes the search of the romantics, and their focus on the individual; and thus “Nature will not stop writing” (Bloom 131). Works CitedBloom, Harold. Williamworth. New York: Chelsea House, 1985. Print.Hartman, Poetry of Geoffrey H.worth 1787-1814. New Haven: Yale UP, 1964. Print."The Poetry of Williamworth." SIRS Rinascimento 20 May 2004: np SIRS Rinascimento. Web. 06 February 2010."Wordsworth 'Tintern Abbey'" is worth "Tintern Abbey" Web. 04 February 2010. .Wordsworth, William. Selected poem. London: Penguin, 1992. 76-80. Press.