Commentary on Wordsworth's I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
By Jennifer Thompson, published Apr 17, 2008
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The image of the daffodils is impressed upon the reader in a very vivid way. Anyone who has observed a breezy day, and the way that plants, flowers, and water appear and move on such a day, could easily see through Wordsworth's eyes this scene, thanks to the manner in which he wrote it. We see the shock of yellow (he says golden) and the mass of flowers, swaying and bending in the breeze. Assign a personality to them and they could be nothing but happy, and to inflict that emotion onto their audience...and as Wordsworth notes, more acutely felt by the Poet.
Naturally the images brought into our view by the author are quite important to the theme of the poem, and the theme is the happiness brought about by the author's privilege in viewing the daffodil's dance. He conjures up that image later and uses it to give himself an emotional boost (and feels grateful for his solitude in allowing for his mind to perform this function.) The local of the daffodils heightens the reaction to them, as they are next to a body of water which too can be personified, which too the poet has prescribed human-like action and feeling.
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Posted on 04/17/2008 at 8:04:04 AM