Daffodils
Romantic poet William Wordsworth lived from 1770 to 1850. He often based his poetry on the natural environment and used vivid images. Like other romantic poets, he tends to write poetry that is subjective. He lived throughout the French Revolution, which he initially backed but subsequently came to oppose. Some academics contend that Wordsworth's connection with his sister Dorothy was anything than pure love. However, Wordsworth did get married and moved in with his wife and sister. Wordsworth's closest buddy Samuel Coleridge was a talented romantic poet. He was a modern poet who advanced his romantic outlook. They were both genuine nature enthusiasts and engaged participants in the Romanticism Movement.
William Wordsworth is the author of the lyric poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," sometimes referred to as Daffodils. It is one of his best contemporary lyric poems. William Wordsworth describes a moment in which he had the chance to see a valley that was covered in a prodigious amount of daffodils in the poem Daffodils. This lyric poem is divided into four stanzas, each with six lines. The poem's lines are all metered in iambic tetrameter. The poem adhered to the "ABABCC" rhyme pattern. Because he cherished nature, its beauty serves as the poem's primary focus. The readers found it to be very engaging due to the use of figurative language.
Poet: William Wordsworth
Published: 1807