Reader Response to William Wordsworth's Tintern Abbey

Title: Reader Response to William Wordsworth's Tintern Abbey
Category: /Literature/Poetry
Details: Words: 421 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Reader Response to William Wordsworth's Tintern Abbey
<Tab/>My first impression of Tintern Abbey was unenthusiastic, marked by my own superficial reading. However, by perusing it more carefully, the thought, the meaning, and the apparent nebulousness into a strangely enlightening piece. The setting is at once unfamiliar to me, but dwelling on more distant memories, I, too, can connect with the thrusts and positions of the narrator, Wordsworth. Through a period of growth, a previously insensible and philistine …showed first 75 words of 421 total…
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…showed last 75 words of 421 total…elevated thoughts". (93-94) If it were not so, then hiking, national parks, and selling CDs with tracks of running water and waterfall sounds would not be so popular. In the end, I sense that Wordsworth's attitudes are unrealistic, for in the end, All man and I are destined, however foolhardy not to have "A worshipper of Nature" (152), but nature is cursed for our sake, and the inevitability is toil and the sweat on our brow.

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