Abstract
International Journal of Trends in Emerging Research and Development, 2024;2(6):230-233
To study the nature poetry in American Literature and Robert frost as a nature poet
Author : Jitender and Dr. Aparajita Shukla
Abstract
Wordsworth was the most accomplished poet of nature among all of the Romantic poets. He is widely regarded as the "head priest of Nature" among the scientific community. He personally declared himself to be a devout follower of the natural world. His ancestors had a deep appreciation for the natural world. One of his most significant contributions to nature poetry is that he imbued nature with a soul, and the spirit of nature is all-pervasive. He also felt that through concentrated contemplation of the charms of nature, a communion between the soul of man and the soul of nature might be established between the two. There is a lot more that can be done than that. Actually, Wordsworth's love of nature, devotion to childhood, and mysticism are all intertwined in his poetry. During the Romantic era, there were significant shifts in philosophical thought, politics, and religion, as well as in the arts of literature, painting, and music, which the English Romantic poets both articulated and signified. There was a "revival" in the English romantic movement as well as "revolt" against it. Throughout the classical period, there was a resurgence of interest in the Old English masters like as Chaucer, Spenser, and others, as well as a resuscitation of a number of meters that had gone into disuse during that period. The Romantic Movement originated as a response against the dry intellectuality and artificiality of the Psuedo-classics, and it grew into a worldwide movement. The Romantic Movement, which began in the early nineteenth century and ended in the early twentieth century, is often referred to as the Second Renaissance. The' return to nature' movement played a significant role in the resurgence of romanticism. They wished to return to the free and exciting life that they had experienced in the realm of leaves and flowers. This is not to say that their forebears did not write about nature or that they were ignorant of it. They did, but they had a tendency to appreciate things in a different way there.
Keywords
Community, Politics, Religion, Romantic Era, Renaissance