Biology, asked by iyasaschandra5480, 1 year ago

Explain the personification a host of golden daffodils

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
11

Answer:

These lines are from poem Daffodils by Williams Wordsworth

These mean that:-

A bunch of daffodils she were seen here personification means comparing a non living thing with a living thing, so here host means a crowd (which is living thing (men+women)) is compared with daffodils

Answered by duragpalsingh
7

Hey there!

The figure of speech used in the line 'A host of Golden Daffodils' is Personification. It is a figure of speech in which either an inanimate object or an abstract concept is spoken of as though it were endowed with human attributes and feelings.

In this line poet uses personification to describe the daffodils as a crowd of human beings which are just like the host or nature and welcoming the lonely and sad guest in the lap of nature. These host are little yellow people daffodils.

Hope It Helps You!

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