By way of the following quote, Wordsworth criticizes conventional religious orders as well as scientific thinking: "Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers, little we see in Nature that is ours: we have given our hearts away a sordid boon!" (lines. 2-4). In yet another quote, Wordsworth expresses his disgust for controlled and limited thinking brought on by religious dogma: "Great God! I'd rather be a Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; so might I, standing on this pleasant lea, have glimpses that would make me less forlorn" (vs. 8-10). The verses quoted clearly reflect Wordsworth's belief that conventional religious organizations were not only responsible for mankind's state of depravity, but that those same organizations were also responsible for mankind's limited perspective. He was also saying that he'd rather be uneducated and ancient in his way of thinking than to have his perspective of the natural world so spoilt by their influences. .
Again, an idealization of nature combined with an open disapproval of conventional thinking in areas of technology and religious dogma, put together with a free flow of imaginative thinking, as well as the fact that God is mentioned in the poem easily qualifies it as Romanticism. Also, when combined with the unique way Wordsworth implements his more free-flowing poetic style in The World Is Too Much with Us, all these factors put together qualifies this poem as an excellent example of Romanticism in the 19th century. .
The Lime-Tree Bower My Prison.
This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison by Samuel Coleridge exemplifies Romanticism in the way that the whole of the poem involves an idealization of nature. Coleridge apparently wrote this poem while temporarily confined under a Lime tree as a result of an accident, and while his friends were out walking in the surrounding area. The poem basically involves an imaginary stroll Coleridge takes in the woods as a result his temporary limitations.