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27 June, 17:29

Will give brainliest

In Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey

Reread the fourth stanza (lines 58-111).

What is his attitude toward nature now as opposed to before?

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  1. 27 June, 18:23
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    There was self-reflection on the changes that had happened in the five years between the two visits. Before he enjoyed the nature and felt energized by it. Now he understood the deeper meaning of nature and human activities. He felt that the understanding and happiness would be with him even when he was not there anymore.
  2. 27 June, 21:08
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    It is interesting that the speaker of the poem begins by telling us that it has been five years since he was last looking at the spectacular view of nature that he has returned to now. This becomes important because as the poem progresses, the now more sober and philosophical Wordsworth compares his enjoyment and appreciation of the view with his more passionate and uncontained responses when he first visited the spot. Note how he describes how he reacted five years ago. Wordsworth described himself as a passionate animal, reveling in the beauty of nature before him, comparing himself to a deer. Nature, then, to Wordsworth was "all in all," an "appetite; a feeling and a love." Wordsworth then goes on to say that this time has passed, but he is not sad about this, because those "raptures" have been replaced by different but equally beneficial responses to nature.
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