Wordsworth's Pantheism
The greatest contribution of Wordsworth to the poetry of Nature is his unqualified pantheism. He believes that God shines through all the object of Nature, investing them with a celestial light- "a light that never was on sea or land," He finds Him in the shining of the stars; he marks Him in the flowering of the finds'. This immanence of God in Nature, gives him mystic visions. Nature is on longer a mere vegetation; Subject to the law of growth and decay; not a collection of object to be described but a manifestation of God. Nature is a Revelation and Wordsworth is the prophet.
