The poem is basic romantic poem where the poet feels a mystical relationship to nature.
This poem reflects Coleridge's Pantheism - that is, that he believed God and the Universe to be one thing. This is especially evident in lines 9-10 "So I will build my alter in the fields..." He recognises that it may indeed be "phantasy" or impractical to draw all of one's knowledge from nature "...lessons of love and earnest piety" (5), but he says "let it be" that way - he doesn't care if people ridicule him for this belief. Ultimately this poem reflects the Romantic's concern with nature, that it is a wellspring of knowledge and all lessons can be learnt from it. Coleridge exalts nature in this poem by expressing his Pantheistic view of it being God.
للاسف هذا الشئ الوحيد اللي حصلتة
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