37 pages • 1 hour read
William WordsworthA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
As the Poet Biography of this study guide mentions, William Wordsworth is a major figure of English Romanticism, a literary, philosophical, and artistic movement that began in the early 1800s. English Romanticism has its origins in the French Revolution of 1789, when Enlightenment values like reason and order inspired more disillusion in Europe than faith and a sense of stability.
The Romantic aesthetic involves placing a high value on the creativity of the artist, whose originality is paramount. Additionally, the disordered and unpredictable power of nature is contrasted with the regimented approach to society that characterized the Enlightenment mindset. Wordsworth’s individuality and his attachment to the natural landscape of England assure his role as the father of English Romanticism.
Wordsworth, along with Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Blake, represent the first generation of Romantic poets, and their ouvres reveal their indebtedness to classical poetry. Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats are the leaders of the second generation of Romantic poets, and their writing reveals more of their own personal emotion and experience.
English Romanticism continues to inspire contemporary artists and writers, and today’s environmental movement can be credited in part to the Romantics and their sense of ethical stewardship towards nature. As well, modern-day interest in social emancipation and progressive politics can be traced to the anticonformist attitudes of the early Romantics, who believed strongly in the potential of humans and in the responsibility all humans bear for their fellow members of society.
Though “Tintern Abbey” is one of the most famous poems of all of English literature, its geographical setting is actually in Wales. The ruins of Tintern Abbey sits on the Welsh bank of the River Wye, which functions as a natural boundary between Gloucestershire, England and Monmouthshire, Wales.
In the middle 1700s, a trend began that encouraged individuals interested in travel to visit the less developed, more wild locations in Great Britain. The location of Tintern Abbey grew in popularity due to its picturesque position on the banks of the River Wye and the surrounding beauty of the Wye Valley. Wordsworth’s walking tour in this area took place in the late 1700s.
At this time, Wordsworth likely noted the geographical and topographical features of the area. The wooded border surrounding the ruins of the monastery as well as the flowing waters of the lower River Wye offer visitors a visual break from the plateaud countryside of both Wales and England in which the ruins are located; the contrasting natural landscapes and the haunting presence of the ruins of the medieval abbey draw attention to the mortality of humans and the endurance of nature.
By William Wordsworth