-
Essay / The Delicious Scent of Life - 1547
The Delicious Scent of LifeMemories of experiences fill our lives with emotion as we think of what could have, could have, or should have happened. Past experiences affect how one perceives the future. Just like past experiences that inhabit the mind, present experiences create others for the future. Williamworth's most famous work, 'Tintern Abbey', reflects how nature and the earth itself are a gift from God. Worth explains that we must see nature in a relationship with human life. The spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings towards man and nature creates such symbolism and meaning that reminds us to always remember the small details. Something small can change life forever. He begins the journey in “Tintern Abbey” by taking the reader from the top of a mountain stream to the valley where he sits under a sycamore tree and perceives the beauty of the natural world. Worth draws the connection between nature and how it is a force that binds humanity not only to the past and the future, but also to other human beings. Originally called “Lines written a few kilometers above Tinturn Abbey”, it is crucial to define it. It is said to be a few miles above Tinturn Abbey, looking down on the view from above. Very meticulously, he goes on to say: “Once more I see these high cliffs which, on a wild and isolated scene, inspire thoughts of deeper isolation and connect the landscape with the calm of the sky. The day has come when I rest here, under this sycamore” (4-10). Because he was observing the abbey, he fell into a state of memories. He writes the poem under the sycamore tree while he is overflowing with emotion at the grandeur of nature. He is delighted with...... middle of paper ...... humanity", he recognized his own morality. The satisfaction of his own conscience is there, at Tinturn Abbey. The human spirit is like a flowing river, both powerful and flowing, with a capacity for destruction and corruption As I said before, the presence of his sister Dorothy seemed to surround him. She stood there beside him. side by side, when she was alive and now that she let it be understood, he can still see her while contemplating the landscape of Tintern Abbey. He finds himself in Dorothy “In your voice, I catch/. the language of my old heart and I read/my old pleasures in the shooting lights/of your wild eyes” (117-119) Worth advises Dorothy and the reader to take his lines to heart as a blessing. believe that nature will always bring comfort in difficult times and new insight into the meaning of life..