Friday, February 3, 2012

Wordsworth's poem Daffodils?

They flash upon that inward eye



Which is the bliss of solitude;





Explain to me what you can about this line, I just do not understand it. One theory is that the inward eye could mean his mind? And that the daffodils reminded him of a time when he was happy. Would that be plausable? Any of your opinions welcomed! 10 points best answer :)

Wordsworth's poem Daffodils?
Memory is the bliss of solitude here. The poem is a reflective one and so memory is what it means
Reply:inward eye is deeper insight - the private part of mind from which one views the world sometimes.

the bliss of solitude - the perfection of not being bothered by other people.
Reply:the bliss of solitude refers to memory and the art or act of reflection
Reply:The image of the daffodils recurs in his mind's eye - (the picture a person chooses to see when their eyes are closed) - and this kind of tranquil, reflective state of visualisation is one that gives him a sense of great happiness / well-being in moments when he is totally alone.

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