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A response to Mr.

William Wordsworth's 'I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud' It is generally troublesome, I


feel, to make a reaction to Mr. William Wordsworth's good and revered poem, 'I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud' in a such couple of words. A reaction to a poem might be viewed as a reflection on highlights like
the language, the symbolism, and absolutely, how the poem caused me to feel. As it may, I will attempt
to summarize this poem's impact on me, considering the elements referenced previously. This poem has
endured over the extremely long haul. It has floated through significantly more than one age, being
skimmed and rehashed, is because of the shortsighted yet convincing story it tells. The initial three
verses are wonderful pictures painted utilizing fathomable yet rich language. The language might be
viewed as plain; be that as it may, it repeats a quiet and serene climate as it doesn't occupy the reader.
Wordsworth depicts this genuinely paramount experience by exemplifying 'the host of golden daffodils.'
He does this all through the poem, for instance, at the end of the subsequent refrain: 'Tossing their
heads in sprightly dance. ' This, I accept, adds life to the poem—this humanoid attribution interfaces
language with wonderful pictures. I, as a reader, have entered Wordsworth's memory, and I visualize
this appealing scene; the incalculable daffodils 'dancing in the breeze'. It makes an all the more great
and bewildering vibe that satisfies the reader like Wordsworth in verse three: 'A poet could not but be
gay.'

"Poetry is a spontaneous outpouring of feeling, not the emotion of the actual event, but the emotion
recollected in repose," William Wordsworth said, and I believe his poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"
is a good illustration of this. This poem could become one of my favorites since it conveys a tale about
Wordsworth's sentiments for nature. It offered an optimistic view on nature's creativity, recalling
feelings similar to those expressed by Wordsworth in the last stanza: 'And then my heart with pleasure
fills.'

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