An essay on the mysticism of William Wordsworth. (mysticism and poetry)

An essay on the mysticism of William Wordsworth. (mysticism and poetry)


As a mystic poet, William Wordsworth has taken himself to unique heights. His description of the mysterious (mysticism and poetry) nature has made the poem more alluring.

 

Wordsworth's mysticism is characterized by his meditative mood and pantheistic (pantheism) view of nature. In fact, the mystic clings to the truth behind the changing symbol.  Tennyson says of mysticism, "By God Almighty! There is no deception in this matter. It is not a hazy ecstasy, but a state of transcendent wonder, combined with absolute clarity of mind."

 

The fundamental foundation of a mystic is based on the mystic's belief that there is an essential unity, a unity of likeness in all objects of nature and human nature created by Almighty God. As a mystic, Wordsworth sees an undivided and unchanging life in all lives and sees the inseparable in the separate. The transcendental feeling of ecstasy and cosmic consciousness comes to Wordsworth from time to time and in those moments he becomes a living soul who completely forgets his external existence.

 

An essay on the mysticism of William Wordsworth. (mysticism and poetry),


mysticism, roughly defined, is a state of sublime imaginative and spiritual experience in which one has a direct, immediate, and intuitive perception of an all-encompassing infinite and eternal reality: the immanent transcendent Absolute Being, which underlies and penetrates, but it also transcends the sensual material universe. It's what "God in all" and "all in God" mean. The mystic is inspired to conceive the vision of the ultimate divine oneness of the cosmos, all life, by the feeling of an ultimate divine principle that pervades and leads nurtures, and supports all things and all life in the universe. The mystical imagination sees a living relationship between the soul of man and the soul of the universe: a vision of cosmic unity, brotherhood, and community.


William Wordsworth poet of Nature & Masterclass of Romanticism

 

Wordsworth's mysticism is one of a kind, although there are some characteristics that are observed in all forms of mysticism. It is a kind of mysticism of nature. Wordsworth's mystical experiences are presented primarily in the context of his treatment of nature. He had never restricted his poems to the narrow confines of the sights, sounds, smells, and movements of various elements of nature. His goal was to achieve something supernatural and divine and to leave the traces of his mystical experiences in nature and in human life in his poetry. So his poetry not only talks about the beautiful and peaceful aspects of nature but also covers his mystical experiences.

 

Wordsworth achieved name and fame in his time as a great mystical poet. He is a mystic at heart. He was never satisfied with the presentation of the beautiful and peaceful aspects of nature. He did not like to be close as a purely graphic representation of the beautiful views and natural scenes. He wanted to achieve something higher and translate his mystical experiences in nature and human life into his poetry. So his poetry is not only a joyous record of happy natural objects that he contemplates in moments of ecstasy and joy but also a full experience of his mystical experience. (mysticism in romanticism)

 

Wordsworth believes that a divine spirit pervades all objects in nature. As a true pantheist, he also says that everything is God and God is everything. In Tintern abbey poem it says:


 "And I have felt

 A presence that troubles me with joy

 Of sublime thoughts; a   sublime feeling

 Of something for a deeper penetration

 Whose dwelling is the light of the setting sun

 And the round ocean and the living air

 Of man ".

 

 

Wordsworth believes that nature can ease the troubled minds of man. The beautiful and lush aspects of nature are an infinite source of healing power. Material life sometimes becomes so naked and painful that people lose their search for life. When life becomes too much to bear, a lovely and loving encounter with nature can quickly lift the cloud of cynicism from the head of the observer. The loudness and disruption of city life can make life intolerable for humans, but Wordsworth believes that nature can soothe man's troubled minds. The beautiful and lush aspects of nature are an infinite source of healing power. Material life sometimes becomes so naked and painful that people lose their search for life. When life becomes too much to bear, a lovely and loving encounter with nature can quickly lift the cloud of cynicism from the head of the observer. The noise and disruption of city life can make life miserable, yet recollections of nature in a lonely place might help to relieve the burden of devastation, terror, and asphyxiation:


“But often in lonely rooms and in the midst of noise”

 From cities and towns, I owe them

 In hours of fatigue, sweet sensation.

 The sense in the blood and sense in the heart;

 And even pass to the purest spirit

 With quiet restoration ...”

 

According to Wordsworth's poems, there is a predetermined harmony between the spirit in nature and the mind of man, and it is the harmony that allows nature to transmit its own thoughts to man and meditate on them until the union between them occurs. Due to this harmony between man and nature, nature was able to teach and educate a man. Wordsworth believes that an unbroken chain connects all things in the outside world and that man's spirit can communicate with God through nature. He animates all items in nature and allows them to communicate with one another, much like a true mystic. In nature, he notices the existence of sentient beings.


 

Wordsworth’s poem ode on intimations of immortality"(summary on recollections of early childhood)








According to Wordsworth (treatment of nature in poetry), the world is one of loving and active friendship. Each flower, cloud, stream, hill, star, and bird that lived under them had its own life. Wordsworth cherishes even the simplest and most common objects of nature and human life as a genuine philosopher. Nothing can harm him since divine life has touched everything in the universe. To him, nothing is insignificant or trivial. The most common nature plays as important a role in this universal life as the greatest natural phenomenon; the meanest flower becomes as important as the setting sun:


 "The meanest flower that blows me is

 It can give thoughts too deep to cry."

 

Judging, Wordsworth is a poet, a seer, and a practical and mystical psychologist with an amazingly subtle mind and tiny commonplace feelings. In nature, he may decipher the meaning of existence.


“The anchor of my purest thoughts, the nurse,

The guide, the guardian of my heart, and soul.

Of all my moral being.”


He has held to the belief that nature is a living entity and the home of God throughout his life. Wordsworth's mysticism was founded on this concept (mysticism in romanticism). Wordsworth's mysticism is distinct in that it is characterized by a contemplative mood and a pantheistic perspective of nature. It is founded on the notion that nature is a living being and God's dwelling place. The manner by which a person comes into contact with God is through nature. According to Wordsworth, a divine spirit can be seen in all-natural objects. He also claims that everything is God and God is everything, like a real pantheist.

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