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Nature And Composition of William Wordsworth's Poems

Nature :

William Wordsworth was born on 7th April 1770 in England. Wordsworth made his appearance in the field of writing in the year 1787 by publishing a sonnet in "The European Magazine".

William Wordsworth is considered as early Romantic poets. In his school days, he got the chance to saw and feel the nature and its harmony very closely, which also reflects in his poems. William Wordsworth was very fascinated towards natural objects like flowers, bridges, lakes, sunshine etc.. But on the other hand, he never liked the crowd and noise. In these poems like; "The London" and "The world is too much with us" he complains that man is destroying nature and wasting the sources of earth. 


Composition of Poems:

William Wordsworth was highly influenced by the French Revolution. Wordsworth lost his idealistic view after seeing the rebellions, the bloodshed and all the death that People committed during the French Revolution. The types of the composition of their poems are very vast, but from many of their poems, we can say that in his poetic imaginations, often it has been found that he get amazed for what's going on. Famous for their "Lyrical Ballads" written with S.T Coleridge, besides this, he had written many poems on Romanticism and nature. He used to write on simple objects of nature and try to make them alive by their intuitive imagination. He was the true lover of nature, and always thought nature as a God creation, he describes a friend as a true companion in this nature, he had the perception to see Angels in trees. Wordsworth always tries to go deep into his own minds without looking at surface appearances, like a trance-state. Willaim Wordsworth believed to write in simple English so that every common people could understand and feel it. 


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