hi my question is what does the Synecdoche mean in this line in the poem daffodils
the line is “My heart with pleasure fills”
pls help this is urgent
Answers
Answer:
These are the two final lines of Wordsworth’s poem “The Daffodils,” and on their own, out of context, then (as Joe Devney says) they don't really mean much. Apart from anything else, the “and then" refers back to a specific time, not clear from your brief quotation. So let's put it all into context.
Wordsworth's poem is about a time when he had been walking in the Lake District countryside, and had come across an area where there were thousands of wild daffodils. They were everywhere, “beside the lake, beneath the trees, fluttering and dancing in the breeze.” Notice that word, “dancing:” daffodils aren't people and can't dance, so this isn't literally true, of course; it's a special kind of metaphor called personification, which means writing about things as if they were human. He just means that in the breeze, they bobbed about as if they were dancing.
He stood and looked at this enormous “host of golden daffodils" (“host" also makes them sound like people) for a long time, enjoying this beautiful sight, before moving on. But the image has stuck in his mind, and often when he's just lying in bed, whatever his mood, he sometimes suddenly gets a mental picture of the daffodils again. “And then my heart with pleasure fills, And dances with the daffodils.”
Answer:
Means
Explanation:
My heart is fill with pleasure