The World Is Too Much With Us Analysis

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Society’s ability to discover beauty around them is quickly fading day by day as the definition of beauty is transforming into anything shallow or easily obtained. In William Wordsworth’s Romantic sonnet “The World Is Too Much With Us,” an advocate for nature reveals how people no longer have respect for nature and its beauty. Through his observation, he wishes to share his disappointment on how humanity’s materialistic mindset has separated the harmony of society with nature. The first stanza, the octave, reveals the speaker’s attitude toward man’s obsession with material wealth and disregard for the appreciation of the beauty of nature. The poet begins by emphasizing the wasteful, “getting and spending” (2) mindset of society through the visual image of “giv[ing] our hearts away” (4) to consumerism in society. The oxymoron of “a sordid boon” creates a negative connotation of the exchange of goods for the love of nature. Ultimately, Wordsworth personifies the world as the entity that “robs people of their perceptions” (Edwards), by endowing it with the metaphorical title of a “pris...

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