Math, asked by seasonind, 1 year ago

Give a short analysis on the poem A slumber did my spirit seal

English- class-9
chapter- a slumber did my spirit seal

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Answered by peher18
2
HEY MATE HERE IS YOUR ANSWER

The story is written by William Wordsworth

the speaker of the poem records that his soul felt at peace, as though asleep and existing in a deep calm where he had nothing to fear. (The meaning of the first line might be rewritten as ‘A slumber sealed, or protected, my spirit’.) This is because of an unidentified ‘she’ who did not seem to be marked by the passing of time or the ravages of nature as other mortals are. But wait: in the second stanza, we are suddenly informed of the woman’s (girl’s?) death: she lies still and powerless, unable to see or hear, and has become a part of the day-to-day world of nature.

Is ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ one of Wordsworth’s Lucy poems? It’s often assumed that it belongs to that suite of poems about a young girl who died; but unlike the other Lucy poems, ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ doesn’t mention Lucy’s name, so at best it can be surmised (tentatively, at that) that Wordsworth had ‘Lucy’ in mind in this poem. However, Wordsworth placed ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ near the bona fide Lucy poems, ‘She dwelt among the untrodden ways’ and ‘Strange fits of passion had I known’ – in the 1800 edition of Lyrical Ballads, suggesting that he intended this to be a Lucy poem.

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Answered by sudhanshudhek
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Secondary School Math 15+8 pts

Give a short analysis on the poem A slumber did my spirit seal

English- class-9

chapter- a slumber did my spirit seal

Report by Seasonind 28.01.2019

Answers

sudhanshudhek

SudhanshudhekAmbitious

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peher18

Peher18Expert

HEY MATE HERE IS YOUR ANSWER

The story is written by William Wordsworth

the speaker of the poem records that his soul felt at peace, as though asleep and existing in a deep calm where he had nothing to fear. (The meaning of the first line might be rewritten as ‘A slumber sealed, or protected, my spirit’.) This is because of an unidentified ‘she’ who did not seem to be marked by the passing of time or the ravages of nature as other mortals are. But wait: in the second stanza, we are suddenly informed of the woman’s (girl’s?) death: she lies still and powerless, unable to see or hear, and has become a part of the day-to-day world of nature.

Is ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ one of Wordsworth’s Lucy poems? It’s often assumed that it belongs to that suite of poems about a young girl who died; but unlike the other Lucy poems, ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ doesn’t mention Lucy’s name, so at best it can be surmised (tentatively, at that) that Wordsworth had ‘Lucy’ in mind in this poem. However, Wordsworth placed ‘A slumber did my spirit seal’ near the bona fide Lucy poems, ‘She dwelt among the untrodden ways’ and ‘Strange fits of passion had I known’ – in the 1800 edition of Lyrical Ballads, suggesting that he intended this to be a Lucy poem.

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