English, asked by ankitraghu1602, 1 month ago

how does the song of solitary reaper influence the mind of William Wordsworth

Answers

Answered by reddiamond1607
1

Answer:

In Wordsworth's Solitary Reaper, the speaker of the poem finds a maiden working all “by herself” in the field and singing a melodious song. Wordsworth describes the lonesome maiden's song as sad and beautiful.

Answered by yogeshkumar49685
0

Answer:

One of English Romantic poet William Wordsworth's best-known compositions is the lyric poem "The Solitary Reaper." His sister Dorothy and he visited the Scottish village of Strathyre in the parish of Balquhidder in September 1803, which served as the inspiration for the poem.

One of Wordsworth's most well-known post-Lyrical Ballads lyrics is "The Solitary Reaper." The speaker's attention is free to concentrate on the song's tone, expressive beauty, and joyful mood because the words of the reaper's song are incomprehensible to him. The poem's purpose is to extol the "beauty of music and its fluid expressive beauty," which Wordsworth described as the "spontaneous overflow of great feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in serenity" at the core of poetry. The poet commands or implores his hearers to see a young girl reaping while humming to herself. Anyone passing by should either stop or go slowly so as not to disturb the poet, the poet advises. However, there is disagreement regarding the reaper's significance in relation to nature.

Explanation:

The poet (William Wordsworth) describes a Highland lass who is by herself in a field in this poem. She is described as being "single in the field." She is singing a melancholy song as she gathers her crops, and it reverberates throughout the deep valley. The speaker invites us to either "gently pass" or stop and listen to her song.

He claims that no nightingale has ever performed a more exquisite strain of a welcome song to wanderers in the desert. He continues by claiming that a cuckoo bird cannot hum a tune better when it is at its peak in the spring. In the Hebrides, a collection of islands off the coast of Scotland, only her singing may be heard.

The poet is completely unaware of the subject matter or overall concept of this song. Lacking an explanation, he assumes it has to do with a distant conflict, something unimportant, or perhaps even some misery.

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