How does wordsworth bring out his love for nature in the poem the daffodils
Answers
Daffodils
Wordsworth's name is synonymous with nature. Natural beauty, peace, tranquility, and solace are abundantly present in Wordsworth's poems.
In the poem Daffodils, the poet has exquisitely portrayed beauty of nature. He relates a personal experience that he perceived once while wandering in nature.
He was wandering alone like a solitary cloud in the sky. While walking, he reached a spot where poet saw pristine scenic beauty. He saw a lake on whose banks were grown daffodils in an uncountable numbers. The flowers were dancing in the gentle breeze blowing. The breeze was also causing ripple of waves in the lake water.
The poet felt very joyous in the jocund company of daffodils. The poet stood there long and stored the scenic beauty in his memory.
Long afterwards, when the poet grew thoughtful, the gleeful thoughts about the daffodils flashed across his mind and filled him with pleasure.
William Wordsworth is a poet who loves to express this love for nature through his poems.
“Nature is a teacher whose wisdom we can learn, and without which any human life is vain and incomplete.”
Wordsworth’s attitude to Nature can be clearly differentiated from that of the other great poets of Nature.
The theme of the poem daffodils is a collection of humans emotions inspired by nature that we may have neglected due to our busy lives.
The poet compares the plant of daffodils with the stars of milky way. Both of them are numerous in numbers and are shining.
The whole poem was a power of imagination.