An inspiration poems summary
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The speaker of this poem—part of Henry David Thoreau's super-long poem-novel "Inspiration"—is talking about the power of intuition. Inspiration itself alludes to the idea of intuition. When we're inspired, we feel as though we suddenly know things that we didn't know before, and we don't necessarily know how we know them.
It's this experience of inspiration or intuition that the speaker describes: "But now there comes unsought, unseen,/ Some clear divine electuary,/ And I, who had but sensual been,/ Grow sensible, and as God is, am wary." Get it?
So, for the speaker, this intuitive knowledge or inspiration is tied to God (the Transcendentalists, let's not forget, were quite a religious bunch). God provides us with the means of knowing things beyond reason and rationality. After all, God himself exists beyond reason and rationality.
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