Growing Up With Nature - William Wordsworth's "Nutting".

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Growing Up With Nature

“In gentleness of heart; with gentle hand

Touch-for there is spirit in the woods.” That small extract from William Wordsworth’s “Nutting” represents very well the theme throughout the poems I will look at, the theme of growing up with nature and how nature teaches and guides him through life.

                In the poem “Nutting” Wordsworth starts off the day as he has done many times before, going out and looking for chestnuts, the childhood ritual which all children do at one stage during their life. But unlike before he goes to a part of the wood he has never been and which no one else has been to either, “I came to one dear nook

Unvisited.”  This untouched area of the wood delights Wordsworth and he is overjoyed to have found it himself, “A little while I stood,

Breathing with such suppression of the heart

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As joy delights.” A tree full of,

“tempting clusters”. This

“virgin scene” began to seduce Wordsworth and he falls in love with it and begins to think that he owns the tree. So of course trouble is inevitable. “Then I rose,

And dragged to earth both branch and bough, with crash

And merciless ravage:

Deformed and sullied, patiently gave up.” Wordsworth has totally “mutilated” this tree and feels “rich beyond the wealth of kings.” He really does feel delighted with the work he has just done but as the reality of it sets in and the picture of ...

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