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‘Lines Written in Early Spring’ is a quiet, meditative poem in which the speaker, reclining in a grove, listens to the harmonious sounds of nature. While the natural world fills him with gentle pleasure, it also awakens a parallel sorrow. The speaker reflects on how nature’s harmony contrasts with the cruelty and alienation of human society. The flowers, birds, and budding twigs all seem to exhibit a joy and purpose inherent in nature’s design. This observed delight provokes a poignant question: if nature follows a benevolent, divine order, why has mankind deviated so tragically?

The poem’s refrain (“What man has made of man”) serves as its ethical and emotional core, encapsulating the speaker’s grief at human injustice, war, and disconnection. The spiritual language used to describe nature (“holy plan,” “heaven”) suggests that Wordsworth views the natural world as not merely beautiful, but morally instructive. The poem ultimately offers a contrast between a world untouched by corruption and the darker trajectory of human society. Wordsworth’s tone is not only lamenting but quietly urgent, compelling the reader to see in nature not just solace, but a critique – a standard against which humanity’s failings are measured.

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