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Showing posts from January, 2024

Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost

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  Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening [By -- Robert Frost] 1. Summary :  One evening the speaker was on his journey to his destination (the place to which some one is going/ goal). He was riding through a deep dark forest. The weather too wasn't good. There was a snow fall. The woods owner used to live in a nearby village, and the speaker knew him well. But he wasn't to meet the speaker at that time because he even didn't know that the speaker was there at time in such a worst time. It was the darkest and windy evening of the year with snow fall. Even the lake was frozen in extreme cold.  The speaker was attracted by the beauty of the woods and the snowfall. He stopped his horse and started enjoying the beauty there. But his horse thought it to be quite strange to stop in the cold, dark and lonely (solitary, uninhabited) jungle, even without a farmhouse to stay there at night. He gave a shake to his harness bells to warn his master that it was a mistake on his part to stop

The Daffodils/ I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud - Summary and Exercises

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The Daffodils Or   (I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud) 1. Introduction of the poem : The Daffodils is a simple but an impressive poem composed by William Wordsworth in 1804.  It is an semi-autobiographical poem because it depends on a personal familial event. On April 15, 1802, the poet and his sister Dorothy went to their friends at Elsmere.  When they were returning back to Grasmere, they saw a large number of golden daffodils growing on the bank of a Lake Ullswater in the Lake District. [Lake Ullswater]   The flowers were dancing beautifully with the breeze (gentle wind). Dorothy had even written about this scene in her journal (diary).   Later on, the remembrance of the beautiful scene inspired the poet to compose this poem, and he depended on Dorothy's journal (diary) while composing this poem. When the poem was first published, its title was 'I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud', which is also the first line of the poem.  This line indicates about the loneliness of the poet. He f