Pantheism and William Wordsworth

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Sumati Bharti

Abstract

A religious theory that may be utilized to construct an Islamic criticism of English literature according to Islamic principles is Wordsworth’s pantheism. Pantheism may encourage academics whose ultimate objective is to understand God via the study of natural objects of the universe found in English literature, despite the fact that it is fundamentally antithetical to God’s oneness. We were therefore enthralled by Wordsworth’s interpretation and comprehension of nature. However, we tried to reconstruct the idea from an Islamic perspective utilizing Quranic text after learning that his idea of God’s partial presence as a being within each natural element violates Islamic monotheism. The romantic poets like such as Wordsworth, Keats, and Shelley in Britain; transcendentalists Emerson and Thoreau in the United States; and Goethe and Hegel in Germany all contributed to the idea’s rise in popularity in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. It emerged as the preeminent literary form dedicated to praising nature in the nineteenth century. Philosophers and poets from all eras and stages manifest pantheism in a variety of languages.

Article Details

How to Cite
Sumati Bharti. (2023). Pantheism and William Wordsworth. Knowledgeable Research: A Multidisciplinary Peer-Reviewd Refereed Journal, 2(04), 39–43. https://doi.org/10.57067/kr.v2i04.191
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Articles

References

Eagle, D. 1970. The Oxford concise dictionary of English Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Bill Scott, The Anchor of My Purest Thoughts, University of Bath, https://blogs.bath.ac.uk/edswahs/2019/02/25/the-anchor-of-my-purest-thoughts/