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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which examines the romantic nature of private thoughts and feelings in William Wordsworth’s The Prelude. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAwiwop.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
primarily of presenting the poets private thoughts and feelings, offering very long poems in many cases, which desire to offer the reader a universal truth of some sort, arrived at
through the long narration of the poet. Or, as the student requesting this paper states, "Romantic poets seemed to believe that their private thoughts and feelings were the fitting subjects
of long poems and that their choice of metaphor, no matter how eclectic, pointed towards universal truths." William Wordsworth was such a poet and his poem The Prelude is a
poem, a very long poem, which presents the reader with stages in life, metaphors for emotions and thoughts and feelings, and ultimately a poem that desires to offer the reader
the truths that the poet envisions or feels. The following paper analyzes this particular poem, or parts of this poem. Romantic Poet: Wordsworth In the first portion of
Wordsworths poem to be examined, in Book I, the narrator speaks of many emotions, many thoughts, many dreams perhaps. It is as though the narrator is completely wrapped up in
a moment of many possibilities, presenting the reader with images that are quite complex and multifaceted. The narrator states "For I, methought, while the sweet breath of heaven/ Was
blowing on my body, felt within/ A correspondent breeze, that gently moved/ With quickening virtue" (Wordsworth I: 33-36). In this the speaker is clearly illustrating that while the physical,
the environmental, breeze was blowing there was something happening within that represented the same reality, although it was within. The narrator is trying to utilize this breeze as a metaphor
for an inner experience that makes the reader feel the narrator is finding some truth. But, then that possibility of some sense of epiphany perhaps becomes "A tempest, a redundant
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