In the first
stanza the speaker describes a time when he meandered over the valleys and
hills, "lonely as a cloud." Finally, he came across a crowd of
daffodils stretching out over almost everything he could see, "fluttering
and dancing in the breeze":
I wandered
lonely as a cloud
That floats on
high o'er vales and hills,
When all at
once I saw a crowd,
A host, of
golden daffodils;
Beside the
lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and
dancing in the breeze.
In the second
stanza the speaker goes into more detail about the daffodils. They reminded him
of the Milky Way, because there were so many flowers packed together that they
seemed to be neverending. The speaker
guesses that there were ten thousand daffodils, which were "Tossing their
heads in sprightly dance":
Continuous as
the stars that shine
And twinkle on
the milky way,
They stretched
in never-ending line
Along the
margin of a bay:
Ten thousand
saw I at a glance,
Tossing their
heads in sprightly dance.
In the third
stanza the speaker compares the waves of the lake to the waves of daffodils and
decides that even though the lake is "sparkling," the daffodils win
because they have more "glee." He then comments that he, like any
other poet, could not help but be happy "in such a jocund company."
He looked at the scene for a long time, but while he was there he was unable to
understand what he had gained from the experience:
The waves
beside them danced; but they
Out-did the
sparkling waves in glee:
A poet could
not but be gay,
In such a
jocund company:
I gazed--and
gazed--but little thought
What wealth the
show to me had brought:
In the fourth
and final stanza the poet describes what he gained from the experience.
Afterwards, when he was lonely or feeling "pensive," he could
remember the daffodils, seeing them with his "inward eye," and be
content:
For oft, when
on my couch I lie
In vacant or in
pensive mood,
They flash upon
that inward eye
Which is the
bliss of solitude;
And then my
heart with pleasure fills,
And dances with
the daffodils.
Analysis
"I
wandered lonely as a cloud" takes place in the Lake District of Northern
England. The area is famous for its hundreds of lakes, gorgeous expanses of
springtime daffodils, and for being home to the "Lakeland Poets": William
Wordsworth, Samuel Coleridge, and Robert Southey.
This poem,
obviously inspired by Wordsworth's stomping grounds, is well-loved because of
its simple yet beautiful rhythms and rhymes, and its rather sentimental topic.
The poem consists of four six-line stanzas, each of which follow an ababcc
rhyme scheme and are written in iambic tetrameter, giving the poem a subtle
back-and-forth motion that recalls swaying daffodils.
By comparing
himself to a cloud in the first line of the poem, the speaker signifies his
close identification with the nature that surrounds him. He also demonstrates
this connection by personifying the daffodils several times, even calling them
a "crowd" as if they are a group of people.
The idea of
remembering the beauty of nature even when not in its presence appears in
several of Wordsworth's later poems, including "Tintern Abbey,"
"Ode; Intimations of Immortality," and "The Solitary
Reaper." Even though the speaker is unable to appreciate the memory he is
creating as he stands in the field, he later realizes the worth that it takes
on in sad and lonely moments.
Sources:www.gradesaver.com
› Wordsworth's
Poetical Works › Study Guide-27.09.2012
D.N.
Aloysius
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