English, asked by faltug351, 2 months ago

d. Q2 5. Read the passage given below and explain the following lines: [Hints: Poem, Upon Westminister Bridge, Poet-William Wordsworth] Earth has not anything to show more fair:

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Answered by Anonymous
10
  • “Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802” is a sonnet written by William Wordsworth, arguably the most prominent of the English Romantic Poets. The title marks a specific place and time—a viewpoint over London’s River Thames during the Industrial Revolution—and is typical of Wordsworth, whose work often deals with both the power and fleeting nature of remembered moments. The poem’s speaker contemplates the city at dawn, seeing it for its breathtaking beauty while also acknowledging the industrial forces transforming it. When published, the poem appeared alongside sonnets that explicitly criticized industrial England
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Answered by Sly01
39

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He regards this beauty above everything and states that nothing can be seen more beautiful on earth than what he sees at that moment and hence says that the earth has brought out its real beauty.

Earth has not anything to show more fair: ... The line ends with a colon, letting us know that he's going to tell us what earth is "showing" after the line break.

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