English, asked by flowers1321, 4 months ago

Hiw does William wordsworth apply the element of nature in his poem the solitary reaper?

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

In "The Solitary Reaper," Wordsworthdescribes nature in terms that aremeant to trigger imagination and wonderment. Wordsworth finds a vast amount of mystery in the natural world as the speaker in "The Solitary Reaper." One example of this would be in the girl's song.

Answered by dimpi98
2

Answer:

Nature is an aesthetic object which creates a particular sensibility or emotion within the poet in "The Solitary Reaper." The reaper of the title is less a person than an element within the landscape that the poet describes.

The woman who is toiling in the fields seems, to the poet, part of the landscape. That is, she does not exist as an individual, but as a decorative or affective element in the scene that the poet is describing. So in this sense, nature in this poem is seen as a kind of aesthetic object, a thing of beauty that creates an emotion in the poet, one which he will remember long after this moment when he hears the reaper's song.

Reading each of the stanzas individually bears this out. In stanza 1, the "solitary Highland Lass" sings a song that causes the whole vale to "overflow" with the sound. The valley and the song are united in a single experience: the song enhances the prospect of the vale, and the vale causes the song to reverberate and endure. In stanza 2, the woman is compared to birds—a nightingale and a cuckoo. Her song is less a human utterance than something that is more "thrilling" than the songs of these birds in lonely places. Stanza 3 concentrates even more on the emotional...

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