Posted by:
IanB (---.tnt11.mel1.da.uu.net)
Nine lines which flow charmingly and appear profound, but which embody ideas that are simple - some might even say too simple.
Any paraphrase or explanation is bound to appear inelegant and wordy by comparison.
The most famous line in the poem, 'The child is father of the man', means that just as a boy may inherit his father's characteristics, so too does a growing man have the potential to retain and develop the characteristics he showed as a child. The particular characteristic that Wordsworth focuses on in the poem is 'natural piety'.
I don't read 'natural' as referring to 'Nature'. I think it means the kind of instinctive (i.e. untaught) attitude that a child has, compared with the more artificial piety that can be the product of religious instruction. Wordsworth treats a child's natural feelings of wonder, joy and awe at the sight of beautiful things as a manifestation of piety in the sense of reverence for God's creations.
The example Wordsworth gives of such natural piety is his exhilaration at the sight of a rainbow. He says that this remains as strong for him as a grown man as when he was an infant, and he wants that to continue into his old age. Otherwise he would rather die.
One could question whether, apart from introducing the expression 'natural piety', the last two lines add or even say anything meaningful. What does it really mean to say that his 'days' are 'bound each to each'? The last two lines appear to reiterate the substance of lines 5 and 6. He wants natural piety to be the continuing element that links his days together (whatever that means!).
Perhaps one could infer that he regards that kind of piety as sufficient and better than tutored religious piety, but I suspect that that would credit him with more philosophical thought than he actually put into this little poem.
Ian
Post Edited (12-26-04 16:51)