Pantheism, as defined by the Oxford English Dictionary, is “a belief or philosophical theory that God is immanent in or identical with the universe; the doctrine that God is everything and everything is God. Freq. with implications of nature worship or (in a weakened sense) love of nature.” (CITATION) It is quite evident that in “Tintern Abbey” there is an emphasis on nature throughout the poem. Through further research, I have identified the presence of pantheism in the poem. In the poem, Wordsworth
novel, he is revealed as a humanistic soul that’s in touch with the universality of the earth and soil he treads upon. Through the use of blunt and undefined nature images, Meursault’s revelations and newfound trust within an environment outside of society are softly whispered by Camus. In essence, Meursault imposes his need for meaning upon nature as well as upon a God who rejects him. Through this imposition, he hopes to acquire an immortality which is similar to a Christian afterlife. The arguments
valuing of nature, the direct threat to the natural habitat marked by the presence of soot around steel manufacturing towns due to the Industrial Revolution catalysed increased support in Pantheism which valued the unity between man, God and nature. A Pantheist himself, Coleridge’s This Lime Tree Bower My Prison (1816) follows the persona’s wishes to accompany his colleagues upon an expedition after suffering a scald. The persona’s initial exclamation “This lime-tree bower my prison!” which metaphorically
Romanticism was a revolutionary movement which began in English Literature (mainly poetry) around the Eighteenth Century in Western Europe and gained height during the times of the Industrial Revolution. Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, Keats, Coleridge and Blake were regarded as the ‘Big Six’ of Romanticism. In ‘Tintern Abbey’ by William Wordsworth, ‘Frost at Midnight’ by Samuel Coleridge and ‘ Ode to the West Wind’ by Percy Shelley, we see clearly that nature is the central trigger for the poet’s imagination
A worldview is a particular philosophy of life or conception of the world. Everybody has their own opinion of a worldview. To me, a worldview is the perspective in which one person views the world. Norman Geisler and William Watkins see a worldview as this, “A worldview is a way of viewing or interpreting all of reality. It is an interpretive framework through which or by which one makes sense of the data of life and the world.” When they say “an interpretive framework” they are talking about