Place Of Burial In The South Of Scotland

Place Of Burial In The South Of Scotland
This sonnet belongs to Wordsworth's 'Ecclesiastical Sonnets,' composed between 1821 and 1822, and it contemplates a burial ground in the southern Scottish Borders - that windswept territory where history lies thick in the soil. Here Wordsworth does what he does best: he finds the extraordinary in the ordinary, turning his attention to the quiet resting place of ordinary Scots and discovering there a meditation on mortality, memory, and what persists when we are gone. The landscape itself becomes sacred text - the stones, the grass, the distant hills all testifying to generations who walked this ground before us. This is Wordsworth at his most contemplative, less interested in the grand sublime than in that intimate awe we feel before the small, everyday evidences of human passage. For readers who cherish the Romantics' ability to make a single moment扩容 into eternity, this sonnet offers precisely that alchemy - a visit to a country churchyard that opens onto vast questions about time, faith, and the persistence of the past in the present earth.
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Algy Pug, Bruce Kachuk, David Lawrence, Elizabeth P. +10 more








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