Ruins that Remain

The ruins of Tintern Abbey sit quietly above the River Wye, but in Wordsworth’s poem, they become more than stone, they become a marker of time. The Abbey doesn’t appear directly in the poem’s title by accident; it anchors the memory, even as the poet never describes it in detail. For Wordsworth, its presence is symbolic. It's a structure faded by time, yet still holding meaning. Mapping it honors the idea that even what’s left behind can shape what we create.
Photo: "Tintern Abbey 3" by Gordon M Robertson is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
Coordinates
Latitude: 51.696862000000
Longitude: -2.677023000000
Longitude: -2.677023000000

