William Wordsworth

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    admiration for nature. Our natural world has been celebrated in song, literature, art, poetry, and just about every other form of media one can think of. Naturalists, like William Wordsworth and John Muir, praise nature through written works, showing the emotional effect of the environment through personal experiences. Wordsworth and Muir express their deep and appreciative relationship with nature using personification and heavy use of conflicting tones in their works. Applying human features…

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    daffodils;” In the first stanza of the poem uses a simile to describe the loneliness William was feeling when he stumbled upon the daffodils. “Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze,” shows the reader, through uses of a metaphor to describe his view of the daffodils by comparing them to a crowd of people. This is also a good example of personification. In the last stanza Wordsworth says, “For oft, when on my couch I lie In vacant or in pensive mood, They flash…

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    In “Tintern Abbey” by William WordsWroth, He revisits a place called The River Wye with his sister after five years. Throughout his tour, he discovers that his experience this time differs from the one when he was young. Simply because he looks at nature from a new mature perspective; he views nature in a very deep way with an intense understanding. In this essay, I will interpret one of the stanzas in the poem which describes what Wordsworth was feeling during that particular moment of his tour…

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    We Are Seven

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    while using his words to illustrate a masterpiece; opening in your mind’s eye a portal to what reality they want you to experience. In “We are Seven” William Wordsworth utilizes this power and has his readers experience more than just a sixty nine line dialogue between a “little cottage girl” (6) and an older gentleman. In sixteen quatrains Wordsworth uses the form of his ballad to express his opinions on topics such as the contrast between maturity and childlike innocence, spirituality, the…

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    During the bustle of England's industrial revolution, many writers sought comfort in the soft caresses of the natural world. In the majority of his works, William Wordsworth presents a similar theme, returning to dwell on the lowest, ordinary things and basking in the restorative abilities of nature. Longing for the day when England would return to its rural roots, his poetry creates an idol of nature and its power. However, in this world, there exists great certainty in the uncertain nature…

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    In his poem “London, 1802,” William Wordsworth calls to John Milton, who wrote famous essay against censorship in England advocated the principles of liberty and public virtue, to change England’s character for the better. In “Douglass,” Paul Laurence Dunbar cries to Frederick Douglass, a former slave who was a leader in the abolitionist cause, to bring African Americans social equality and justice. Wordsworth and Dunbar call to these important figures of the past for guidance in their current…

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    rather than the classical. Romanticism also emphasizes religion, supernatural elements and idealization of women and children. William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley and William Blake are known as the major figures of Romanticism in English literature. Their romantic poems, “The Lamb” by William Blake, “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” by William Wordsworth, “Kubla Khan” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, “Ode to The West Wind” by Percy Bysshe Shelley and will be…

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    William Wordworth’s sonnet “[The world is too much with us]” is a staple among Romantic era poems because it embodies the era’s ideals. The ideals of individualism, republicanism, and naturalism define Romantic era poetry, a movement that lasted from the late 18th century until the early 19th century, according to a Salem Press Encyclopedia article about the era. At its core, “[The world is too much with us]” is a written revolt against Puritan work ethic and the industrialization that was…

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    Poetry Synthesis Essay

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    Tennyson uses different yet similar techniques when writing as does William Wordsworth. They both use forms of alliteration and metaphors, but in different ways. The imagery of the Tennyson poem “In Memoriam” Lyric 56 is both realistic and concrete as well as abstract and complex. For example, he uses imagery to say “through nature, red in tooth and claw.” This is unrealistic and rather complex in a way that is also negative. The poem also states that the writer “cares for nothing.” Finally,…

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    inspired by the beauty that nature offers. From seeing nature through the point of an essay and seeing nature through the point of a poem, John Muir, and William Wordsworth created two different pieces that express their connection between man and nature. With the use of tone, imagery and diction, John Muir's essay, Calypso Borealis and William Wordsworth's poem, I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, were both able to express the authors' relationships with nature. In order to convey their adventure…

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