![]() The last or the fourth stanza is narration of what pleasure the author had gained after watching the daffodils dancing that day. The mesmerizing flowers gained a place in his heart he couldn’t understand but felt. The daffodils and lake’s dance bought him a wealth that he couldn’t deny. The author kept staring at both of them, wondering how his sad mood changed into a happy one. Finding their playfulness, the author couldn’t stop himself from joining their company. But the glee flowers won and the sparkling lake lost. Third stanza is the continuation of how along with the flowers, the water in the lake too moved, as if they were competing with each other in the dance. He felt an illusion that he is watching all ten thousand of flowers altogether in a glance. Then Wordsworth expressed that these beautiful flowers stood in a never-ending line. They were nodding their heads while dancing. The author found those flowers like stars which shined and twinkled in the night sky. Second stanza is about how amazing the daffodils looked in the spring season. The flowers were swaying here and there due to the heavy breeze, as if they were dancing happily. Then he encountered the yellow daffodils beside the lake. The author describes himself ‘lonely’ because his brother John was dead, leaving him alone and sad. In the first stanza, the writer finds himself as a lonely cloud floating over the valley. The poem is written as an appreciation of daffodils, and contains six lines in four stanzas. Dorothy Wordsworth, the younger sister of William Wordsworth, found the poem so interesting that she took ‘Daffodils’ as the subject for her journal. He imagined that the daffodils were dancing and invoking him to join and enjoy the breezy nature of the fields. William Wordsworth wrote Daffodils on a stormy day in spring, while walking along with his sister Dorothy near Ullswater Lake, in England. Some of the major works of William Wordsworth are: Richards in 1798, by the publication of ‘Lyrical Ballads’. He was a nature poet who helped to coin the term ‘Romanticism’ in English Literature along with I. William Wordsworth (1770-1850) was one of the major poets of his time honored as England’s Poet Laureate. Thus, Daffodils is one of the most popular poems of the Romantic Age, unfolding the poet’s excitement, love and praise for a field blossoming with daffodils. He had quoted, “Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. William Wordsworth is a well-known romantic poet who believed in conveying simple and creative expressions through his poems. It was published in 1815 in ‘Collected Poems’ with four stanzas. The poem ‘Daffodils’ is also known by the title ‘I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud’, a lyrical poem written by William Wordsworth in 1804. According to a poll taken in 1995 by BBC Radio 4 Bookworm program, ‘Daffodils’ ranked fifth in the nation’s favorite poems.
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