Sunday, May 19, 2019
Response to William Wordsworthââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËI Wandered Lonely as a Cloudââ¬â¢
Response to William Wordsworths I Wandered Lonely as a smirch It is most difficult, I feel, to compose a response to William Wordsworths classic and idolised poesy, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud in such a couple of(prenominal) words. A response to a poem may be seen as a reflection on features such as the language, the imagery and certainly, how the poem made me feel. I will however attempt to trace the influence this poem has had on me, considering the aforementioned features. This poem has evidently stood the test of time.It has breezed through generation later generation being read and reread and this, I believe, is due to its simplistic, yet compelling, humbug it tells. The first collar stanzas are a collection of beautiful images painted by the use of comprehensible yet adequate language. The language may be considered plain, however, I feel it echoes a calm and tranquil atmosphere as it does not busy the reader. Wordsworth is describing this truly memorable experience by personifying the host of golden daffodils.He does this throughout the poem for example at the close of the second stanza Tossing their heads in sprightly dance. This, I believe, adds life to the poem. This personification colligate the language with incredible imagery. I, as a reader, have entered Wordsworths memory and I envisage this allure scene the countless daffodils dancing in the breeze. This further creates a more wondrous and surprise ambience that fulfils the reader like it fulfils Wordsworth in stanza three A poet could not but be animated.William Wordsworth stated that Poetry is a spontaneous overflow of emotion, not the emotion of the actual experience, but the emotion recollected in tranquillity. I believe his poem I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud is a justified example of this quote. I truly admire this poem as it tells a story of Wordsworths feelings toward nature. It, in turn, gave me a positive and joyous outlook on the art of nature unleashing feelings equival ent to Wordsworth in the final stanza And then my heart with pleasure fills.
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