English, asked by kunaldiwakar6650, 1 year ago

What was the poet doing when he saw the daffodils?

Answers

Answered by notoriousboy777
36

Answer: The poet was wandering lonely as a cloud over high vales and hills when all  at once he saw a crowd of golden daffodils. here the poet compare himself as a cloud floating without any destination.

Answered by bhoomikalokesh13
2

Answer: The answer to this question is explained below:

Explanation:

About the poet William Wordsworth:

William Wordsworth was born in 1770 and died in 1850 at Cockermouth, Cumberland, England. He was educated at Hawkshead and at john's college, Cambridge, and lived a quiet life in the midst of his beloved mountains, which left their mark upon much of his poetry. Wordsworth is especially known as a poet of nature. To Wordsworth, nothing in nature was trivial or commonplace. nature had influenced his life more than man. though he was sensitive to the spiritual as well as the physical influence of nature. He was not really a descriptive poet.

About the poem:

The poet was wondering like a cloud when he saw the daffodils. This poem is best known and the loveliest poem of William Wordsworth. The poet tells that while he was wandering like a cloud beside the lake he came across a field of daffodils. The poet compares the daffodils with the stars he says, the daffodils were stretched in the wind area and they twinkled as if one sees the milky way galaxy full of stars. He says he can see ten thousand daffodils at a glance. He was so happy and joyful that he kept on staring at the daffodils. He cannot forget the scene in his entire life, he says that whenever he feels low, pessimistic and pensive, he rejoices in the blissfulness of the daffodils his heart fills with happiness.  

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