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DAFFODILS, istockphoto-1176574947-612x612 - Coggle Diagram
DAFFODILS
2)
What did he suddenly see?
vv. 3 - 4
He saw two crowd of golden daffodils.
1)
What was the poet doing?
vv.1
He was wandering in loneliness.
4)
What were they doing?
vv. 6
They fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
3)
Where were they?
vv. 5
Daffodils were near Lake District.
6)
How many did he see? Is that possible?
vv. 11
He see ten thousand. No it's not possible.
5)
What did the poet associate them with?
vv. 7
He associate theme with the stars of the milky way.
7)
What was was the rest of the nature around him like?
vv. 13-14
There were the waves of the lake that gave him the sense of glee.
8)
Why does the author say'a poet'?
vv. 15
He say that because it's cannot not be happy by this dance.
9)
What kind of state does the poet describe?
vv. 19-20
The poet describe a relaxed like when you are laying on a couch.
11)
Is this solitude similar to that of the first stanza?
vv. 22
Yes, it's similar because in each stanzas there's the theme of solitude. It's similar but not properly the same, in the first part of the poem the sense of solitude is filled with sadness, but in the last part the sentiment it's filled with pleasure and bliss.
10)
What is the result of this experience?
vv. 21
This experience gave him the idyllic sense of bliss.
THE IMPORTANCE OF
MEMORY
and
EMOTIONS
For Wordsworth the
objects
(Daffodils and nature) are the beginning of the poet's sensory experience
The
experience
produce the emotion in the heart of the poet.
The emotion are giving him the sense of tranquillity