Imagery In William Wordsworth's The World Is Too Much With Us

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In the poem “The World is Too Much with Us”, William Wordsworth depends on his usage of imagery to display the beauty, grace, and power of nature in all of its forms. Wordsworth’s imagery personifies nature so that man is able to identify each of the elements as a character. He does so by his description of the ocean, his reflection on the wind, and his allusion to Greek gods associated with nature.
The poem’s imagery begins when Wordsworth compares the ocean to a beautiful woman. When the sea “bares her bosom to the moon” (5), Wordsworth demonstrates that the sea is exotic and graceful. It is an intimate moment that moves the reader. The sea strongly emphasizes grace and exquisite beauty. It illustrates the relationship between the ocean

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