In the 1
st line, the poet says that he has put to rest his conscious and thus has no
‘human fears’. ‘Human Fears’ means the fear of losing property, belongings, and life. Now having given up all such things that give birth to human the 3
rd line, he talks about Lucy, who is, according to the poet, beyond sensual awareness i.e. beyond the prison of life and has attained death. She does not feel the earthly time and earthly years have become timeless for her. Thus she is immortal now and it is Lucy because of whom he has attained fearlessness from the earthly fears.fear, he has now attained peace in nature.
, she has no movement and energy. She neither does hear something nor sees. She has now become the part of the earth and is rolling with it as it turns from day to night and vice versa. She is in her grave, covered with soil, having an epitaph and is under the shade of the tree. Thus, the poet considers her to be in the lap of nature which is an ideal place.
By narrating the story of immortal Lucy, he appreciates the fearlessness from the death which is the root cause of all the human sorrows and worries. He considers death to be something worth attaining.
He desires that he should attain the same peace as attained by Lucy after becoming the part of nature. He desires to become the part of nature and for becoming so, death is a must. Thus he holds the spirit of Romanticism, of which desire for death was a feature.