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Answer:
Wordsworth tends to see Nature as 'out there'; a presence that surrounds humans, and contributes to human life, but is different from humans. If you look at a typical Wordsworth poem (There was a boy, ye knew him well ye rocks) - Wordsworth talks about Nature as something that needs to be learned about and understood, Nature is different from us.
If you look at a Byron poem (The Isles of Greece is a good one) - Byron looks at Nature mainly for what it already means to Man. Wordsworth will look at a landscape and see the mountains, trees, valleys, and rivers as almost spiritual presences - Wordsworth wants to get to know Nature.
Byron will look at the same landscape and he will want to know who lives there, what are the villages? Are there any farms or mines, is there some history?
Wordsworth looks at Nature for what it is; Byron is forever asking what it means.
Wordsworth thinks that humans are part of Nature; Byron thinks that Nature is part of being human.
Odysseus encountered Calypso who seduced him and kept him for years from his wife, until athena intervened. Calypso had to let him go and helped him build his boat
It's easier to eliminate negative self-talk when we focus on all the great positive things about us. It's always easy to focus on the negative but that is not productive.