0Could someone please look at the following question answers for grammar mistakes and weird sentences?02br
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00Here is the poem02br
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00The Daffodils02b00 by 01a
01u00William Wordsworth02u02a00 02br
00I wandered lonely as a cloud02br
00That floats on high o'er vales and hills,02br
00When all at once I saw a crowd,02br
00A host, of golden daffodils;02br
00Beside the lake, beneath the trees,02br
00Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.02br
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00Continuous as the stars that shine02br
00And twinkle on the Milky Way,02br
00They stretched in never-ending line02br
00Along the margin of a bay:02br
00Ten thousand saw I at a glance,02br
00Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.02br
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00The waves beside them danced, but they02br
00Out-did the sparkling waves in glee:02br
00A Poet could not but be gay,02br
00In such a jocund company:02br
00I gazed-01del
00and gazed02del00-but little thought02br
00What wealth the show to me had brought:02br
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00For oft, when on my couch I lie02br
00In vacant or in pensive mood,02br
00They flash upon that inward eye02br
00Which is the bliss of solitude;02br
00And then my heart with pleasure fills,02br
00And dances with the daffodils.02br
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00What was the poet doing?02b02br
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00He was wandering around.02br
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00What did he see?02b02br
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00He saw a field of daffodils.02br
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00Where were the daffodils?02b02br
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00They were beside the lake, under the boughs of the trees.02br
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00With what does the poet compare the daffodils?02b02br
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00He compares the daffodils with the stars.02br
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00Why does the speaker connect daffodils with the stars?02b02br
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00He does so for several reasons. First, their shape. The petals mimic the shape of a star. Second, their number. The stars are infinite; the daffodils are abundant. Third, their color. They're golden, and shimmer like the stars.02br
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00What resemblance does he find between the stars and the daffodils?02b02br
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00Their gleam, flow, abundance, and continuity 01b
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00How many flowers were there?02b02br
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00There was a long belt of about ten thousand flowers.02br
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00Which of the two danced more: the waves or the daffodils?02b02br
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00The daffodils danced more. 02br
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00What did the poet feel looking at the daffodils?02b02br
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00He couldn’t help but feel happy.02br
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00How can wealth come to the poet by looking at the scene before him?02b02br
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00The "crowd" of the daffodils comes his way offering warmth, spiritual wealth, richness and value. He realizes the true wealth of the daffodils, when his inner eye recalls back to the time of happiness with them when he felt depressed in his normal state of mind.02br
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00What happens to the poet when he lies on his couch?02b02br
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00The thought of the dancing daffodils gives him the same pleasure and excitement that he experienced long ago. 00Whenever he feels "vacant" or "pensive," the memory flashes upon "that inward eye / That is the bliss of solitude," and his heart fills with pleasure, "and dances with the daffodils."02br
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00Mention the two moods of the poet.02b02br
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00Lonely (i.e., as a cloud) and Happy (i.e., gay)02br
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00How can the heart dance? 02b02br
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00Imagining the daffodils vividly enough brings his senses and emotions into play until he cannot tell the difference between 00the 00imagined event and 00the 00real one. And his heart starts dancing.01b
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00Has this ever happened to you?02b02br
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00No, I haven’t encountered anything similar.02br
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00Describe the scene in your own words.02b02br
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00The poet walks the countryside alone imagining himself adrift. Then the reverie is broken by the sight of the daffodils caught in the gentle wind and the flowers appear to him to have taken on the form of lively dancers. This shock captures his spirits and he views the scene as a 'host', welcoming and uplifting01i
00.02i00 The daffodils seem to be as numerous as the stars that shine in the sky. 00They stretch endlessly along the shore, and though the waves of the lake dance beside the flowers, the daffodils overshadow the water in glee. The poet can’t help but be happy in such a joyful company of flowers. He stares and stares, but doesn’t realize what wealth the scene will bring him.02br
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00In the poem how does Wordsworth achieve the seemingly effortless effect of implying the unity of his consciousness with nature? Does this technique appear in any other Wordsworth lyrics? 02b02br
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00Wordsworth employs a kind of identity-switching technique, whereby nature is personified and humanity is, so to speak, nature-ized. Wordsworth describes himself as wandering "like a cloud," and describes the field of daffodils as a dancing crowd of people. This kind of interchangeable terminology implies a unity--metaphors from either realm can be applied to the other, because the mind and the natural world are one. A more subtle version of this technique appears in "Intimations of Immortality," in which the poet describes the natural world in the final stanza with a sequence of ascribed actions and characteristics previously performed and possessed in the poem by human beings. 02br
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00What is the central idea of the poem? Give it with a very short introduction of the poet and poem.02b02br
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00About The Poem02b02br
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00"I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"02b00 is an 01a
01u00180402u02a00 poem by 01a
01u00William Wordsworth02u02a00. It was inspired by an 01a
01u00April 1502u02a00, 01a
01u00180202u02a00 event in which Wordsworth and his sister, 01a
01u00Dorothy02u02a00 came across a "long belt" of 01a
01u00daffodils02u02a00. It was first published in 01a
01u00180702u02a00, and a revised version was released in 01a
01u00181502u02a00. In anthologies the poem is sometimes titled "The Daffodils".00The poem paints a picture of peace and tranquility. Wordsworth uses beautiful imagery to paint this picture (imagery of clouds, walks beneath trees, beside lake, etc.)02br
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00About The Poet02b02br
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00William Wordsworth00 (01a
00177002a00–01a
00185002a00) was a great 01a
00English02a00 01a
00romantic poet02a00. He is known as 00"The Poet of Nature" and co-founder of 010200's Romantic Movement01b
00.02b00 00He loved nature, and learned to appreciate every little thing and to see the beauty in simplicity. His poetry was inspired by the beauty of nature. His poems were descriptive and detailed. They used beautiful imagery to evoke emotions, thoughts, and feelings in their readers. He wanted the reader to feel what he felt.02br
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00Central Idea/Main Theme02b02br
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00Simple things in life can enrich our lives how we allow them to. 00We can enjoy natural beauty in two ways: the charm of seeing it and as a memory, and also the feeling in our hearts and minds. 00Everything that's ever happened to us lives in us somewhere. The trick is to retrieve what we've perceived. 00One way to tempt memory into consciousness is to feed it data in a specific, rhythmic, musical way00; another is to build bridges to your subliminal mind.02br
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00“A thing of beauty is a joy forever” (John Keats)02b02br
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