How does wordsworth describe the beauty of the morning?
Answers
Answered by
10
As London seethes gently in a springtime stew of local pollution and Saharan dust, it’s tempting to see Wordsworth’s sonnet as a watercolour of a golden age. If the facts of commerce and empire were ugly, their machinery could still be picturesque, and the environmental and social damage invisible. Aesthetically, of course, there’s no competition between St Paul’s and the Gherkin. But any idea that the 18th-century city, unlike today’s, embodied moral innocence and ideal beauty is an illusion – as the poem itself acknowledges.
Answered by
11
Answer:
the poet describes the morning in the city of London to be smokeless,pure, clean and silent.
Similar questions