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Lines Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey By William Wordsworth

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3 Messages from Tintern (Pages 780-785) The poem, Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, by William Wordsworth is a poem that works from the simple to the complex. William Wordsworth is a generation one romantic poet. The poems are meant to be short and brief, but the poem Tintern is quite a bit longer. This poem by Wordsworth was written in 1798, during his second visit to the valley of the River Wye and what’s left of Tintern Abbey, which was once a great medieval church, in Wales. Wordsworth hasn’t visited Tintern Abbey in five years, and this time he has brought his sister along with him. In the poem, Tintern, the three main messages I got from the text would be, love, the beauty of nature, and time. One of the major factors in Tintern is that the poem shows love. He does not only show love for nature, but he shows love to his sister and overall the setting of the place. Wordsworth has not visited Tintern in five years, but this time he has brought along his sister Dorothy with him. He wants to show his sister the beauty of it. He is describing the beauty and it sounds like comparing that to …show more content…

Wordsworth describes in this poem that even though many years have went by since he has been back to Tintern, nothing has really changed in his eyes. And when they come back to visit it is just the ruins of it, it is still beautiful to him. When he says, “For the future years. And so I dare to hope. Though changed, no doubt, from what I was when first I came among these hills; when like a roe” lines 65 to 67, it tells that the changes really do not affect the way he sees the beauty. Then lines 1 to 4 he is saying even though he has not been there in five years, certain things he misses, “Five years have past; five summers, with the length of five long winters! and again I hear these waters, rolling from their mountain springs with a soft inland murmur. Once

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