Wednesday, March 20, 2019
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud :: Literary Analysis, William Wordsworth
Nature is often a focal point for many authors works, whether it is expressed through lyrics, unmindful stories, or poetry. Authors are given a cornucopia of pictures and descriptions of temperaments splendor that they can reproduce through words. It is because of this that more often than not a proofreader is faced with multiple approaches and descriptions to the way nature is portrayed. nigh authors ply to look at nature from a deeper and personal ceremony as in William Wordsworths I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, while other authors tend to focus on a more religious beauty within nature as scan in Gerard Manley Hopkins Pied Beauty, suggesting to the reader that while to each their accept there is always a beauty to be found in nature and natures beauty can be uplift for the military man spirit both on a visual and uncanny level. Wordsworth and Hopkins both present the reader with a poem conveying the prow of nature. Nature in its variety be it from something as simple as streaked or multicolored skies, long fields and valleys, to things more thickening like animals, are all gifts we take for granted. Some never put one over the truth of what they are missing by keeping themselves indoors fixating on the loneliness and vacancy of their lives and not on what beauty currently surrounds them. Others tend to relate themselves more to the fact that these lovely gifts are from God and should be praised because of the way his gifts have uplifted our human spirit. Each writer gives us their own ideals as how to find and appreciate natures align gifts.In I wandered Lonely as a Cloud, William Wordsworth accomplishes his ideal of nature by using personification, alliteration, and simile within his poem to convey to the reader how natures beauty uplifts his spirits and takes him away from his boring perfunctory routine. Wordsworth relates himself in solidarity to that of a cloud wandering alone, I wandered lonely as a cloud (line 1). Comparing the cloud an d himself to that of a lonely human in low spirits of isolation, simultaneously the author compares the daffodils he comes across as he floats on high oer vales and hills (line 2) to that of a crowd of people jump (lines 3-6 and again in 12). Watching and admiring the dancing daffodils as he floats on by relating them to various beauties of
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