Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Master Essays Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON THE NATURE OF LUCY

College Term Papers - Instant Download

(sponsored links)

Jamaica Kincaid's "Lucy"
This paper discusses the themes of love and anger in Jamaica Kincaid's novel "Lucy". -- 1,125 words;

'Lucy Gayheart'
This paper analyzes Willa Cather's book 'Lucy Gayheart'. -- 2,120 words; MLA

"Lucy Gayheart"
An analysis of the book, "Lucy Gayheart" by Willa Carther. -- 2,100 words;

"Lucy" - Contrasting Perceptions of the Same Reality
A literary analysis of the short novel "Lucy" by Jamaica Kincaid. -- 900 words;

In Defense of Lucy Steele
This paper is a look at the role of young, marriageable women in Jane Austen's novel "Sense and Sensibility". -- 1,615 words; APA

Click here for more essays on THE NATURE OF LUCY

THE NATURE OF LUCY

The Nature of Lucy
William Wordsworth is a revered romantic poet who believed that the meaning of
romanticism is best illustrated when using everyday life events and familiar speech.
Wordsworth's explicit love of nature and mastery of the language allowed him to bring
such emotion and power into each poem without the use of sophisticated words, which he
believes takes away the effect of what is trying to be said. His intentions were such
that any man capable of reading, well educated or not, could feel these emotions and
fully understand his projected messages. "He drops to the earth, for once, all that
matter-of-factness of which Coleridge complained" (Internet Bartleby). (Coleridge did not
look to nature the way Wordsworth did). Wordsworth best shows his love of nature
throughout his renowned "Lucy Poems." In these poems Lucy is considered a child of
nature. She is pure like the earth and has been cared for by nature since her tenderest
years, "Nature vowed to make her 'a Lady of her own'" (Bartleby). Wordsworth seems to
believe that her death was an act of fate, with Nature being so in love with her that it
had to take her back from the Earth. Nature serves as a vitalizing, inspiring force in
all Wordsworth's works. According to Wordsworth People are at their best when close to
the splendor and mystery of nature. (Internet Anonymous 1 )
"The attitude toward Nature in the literature of any age may be tested in two ways: by
what is said, and by what is left unsaid, and of these the second is perhaps the more
significant" (Reynolds 7). The omitted information of the identity and age, and the
realization of Lucy has puzzled critics since the publications of these Lucy Poems.
Perhaps this is what has kept readers so interested and critics so baffled. She is
thought to be Wordsworth's fantasy or his lover, and to some she is believed to be a
relative who he held very close to his heart.
He (Wordsworth) believed that it was especially in the language of nature that man could
know ultimate truths. These truths coexist both in the human mind and in the depth of
things, but rarely become knowable in direct intuition.(Perkins 92) 
"The mind of man is naturally the mirror of the fairest and most interesting properties
of nature" (Stallknecht 46). Every man has some knowledge of nature, so every man should
be able to interpret what Wordsworth is saying. However, it is the way the mind works and
the difference in interpretations that is interesting. One Critic claimed: "She may be
linked to the 'wild boy' of 'Tintern Abbey,' who was lost when the narrator left Nature
and childhood to become an adult" (Internet Anonymous 2 ). 
Her morality is the more significant, since it brings together two irreconcilable ideas -
Lucy's beauty and the ineluctable fact of her death, all the more unthinkable if it
should take place in her youth (Beer 96). 
Whatever the relation or age, his love for Lucy shows so vividly throughout each of these
poems that the reader can feel it. Lucy is construed as many different people and
objects, but only Wordsworth will know the true identity.
Lucy Gray, Strange Fits of Passion Have I Known, She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways, I
Traveled Among Unknown Men, Three Years She Grew in Sun and Shower, and A Slumber Did My
Spirit Seal are the six poems known as "The Lucy Poems." A process seemed to arise as the
poems were read in order of their publications. Starting from the night of her assumed
death, Wordsworth gives a description of her life. He writes on who she was up to his
opinion of her reason for death. He then expresses his reactions to the passing of his
beloved Lucy. "How can one properly describe the death of a young girl who has lived
close to the genius of nature?" (Beer 95) 
Many critics have analyzed these poems, and many of the same conclusions have come to
arise. Wordsworth brings nature from the Earth to the Heavens in his poem "She Dwelt
Among the Untrodden Ways."
A Violet by a mossy stone
Half-hidden from the Eye!
Fair, as a star when only one 
Is shining in the sky! (Wu 327)
A critic, Bateson , remarks that he sees Lucy as a violet hidden from the public world,
and the single star represents her importance in the private world. Beer reacts to
Bateson's thoughts by adding that he believes that the landscape created by these two
objects is that of Wordsworth's new "universe of life." The flower represents human
affection and tenderness for the particular, and the star focuses on the human
imagination and the wondering of perception. He believed that Lucy possessed the
qualities of both: her growth in the flesh portrays the organic harmony of a flower's
growth, while her own inward light gives her the quality of a star (Beer 95-6). Geoffrey
Hartman a renowned critic added that he believed that when people amount to nothing in
the eyes of the world, they become their own world in each other's eyes (Hartman 43).
"Strange Fits of Passion Have I Known," this poem is highly significant in its portrayal
of the senses and emotion and how he ties this into nature. From the very beginning
"Strange Fits of passion Have I Known" to the very last lines, "'Oh mercy!' to myself I
cried, 'If Lucy should be dead!'" Wordsworth also heightens the feeling of emotion in the
narrative technique he uses. His language is plain, which leaves more room for the reader
to concentrate on content rather than style. Because his poem is very emotional, it seems
obvious that this poem be about love. His love seen in this poem is not only described in
the descriptions of "the lover" but also in descriptions of nature. As in most of
Wordsworth's work nature is an established part of his style. His love for the outdoors
and all things natural shows here with references to "a rose in June," and "the evening
moon." Symbols of death are paramount to the poem with words showing sadness and mourning
such as "the moon descended," and "the planet dropped," as though nature fears with him.
The poem is written in past tense and so the fear of gloom and death are prominent. Many
believe Lucy's the moon going down represents death, but in reality the moon returns
every night. Poets added moonlight to their poems to instill the thoughts of mystery,
since darkness has a premonition of fear (Reynolds 23). Many believe that since this is
true, Wordsworth is talking about a ghost. 
Lucy's identity mirrors that of a ghost in all but one poem (Lucy Gray) in the way she
makes her exit, always with an immediate sense of nonexistence. Her reflection through
forests and the moon (the indicator of Lucy's presence) indicate an alignment with
nature, and departure with men. (Cunningham)
One could link Lucy with Lucy Gray, his poem, where according to superstition, Lucy died
in the midst of nature, but her spirit as been seen there. However, Wordsworth did not
believe in writing about the supernatural, so once again the identity remains unknown.
In the study of the evolution of the love of nature three stages have come about. The
third stage is based on the cosmic sense, or the unity between man and nature. The second
stage is recognized as the world around us and it's beauty and worthiness of close study.
In the first stage nature deals with human actions and passions (Reynolds 27-8).
Wordsworth has touched each of these stages in the Lucy Poems. Most poetry relies on the
first stage, but because of Wordsworth's creative ability he brings in every stage and
shows how Lucy resembles each. This truly makes Lucy "Nature's Child."
Bibliography
Works Cited
Anonymous 1. 15 Jan. 1997. Gatech Inc. 31 Oct. 2000
.
Anonymous 2. 17 Jan. 1997. Gatech Inc. 31 Oct. 2000
.
Bartleby. 2000. Bartleby Inc. 31 Oct. 2000 
.
Beer, John. Wordsworth and the Human Heart. New York: 
Columbia University Press, 1978.
Hartman, Geoffrey. Beyond Formalism. New Haven and 
London: Yale University Press, 1970.
Perkins, David. Wordsworth and the Poetry of Sincerity. 
Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard 
University Press, 1964.
Reynolds, Myra. The Treatment of Nature In English Poetry. 
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1909.
Stallknecht, Newton P. Strange Seas of Thought. 
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1958.
Stein, Edwin. Wordsworth's Art of Allusion. University 
Park and London: The Pennsylvania State University 
Press, 1988.
Wu, Duncan ed. Romanticism: An Anthology. Malden:
Blackwell Publishers Inc., 1998.

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2009, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Laser Clinic Toronto :: Original Abstract Paintings :: ART for SALE by the Artist :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn Violin in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto