lucy poems

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William Wordsworth born in 1770 is considered one the two fathers of The British Romantic Movement. In 1789 Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Colridge wrote a collection of poems entitled ‘’Lyrical Ballads’’wich emulated the romantic poems that were becoming increasingly popular in Germany and France. Inspired by the beauty of Northearn England’s Lake District,the poems attempted to capture the human emotions in words. Emotions such as love, rejection and loss were very popular in the romantic era. And nowere is this more profound than in Wordsworth’s collection of 5 poems know as ‘’The Lucy Poems’’. Wordsworth wrote Lucy Poems while homesick on vacation with his older sister Dorothy. Each one of the 5 poems describes a narrator who is desperatly in love with a girl, in a small village, who dies before ever learning of the narrators true feelings. While many belive that there is no real life inspiration for Lucy, stating that Lucy is just an ideal concept of love and womenhood , others have argued that given the deepts of feelings Wordsworth seems to capture in his poems, maybe there really was a Lucy. Lucy’s true identity however remains one of the literate mysteries of all time. In 1980, Hunter Davies contended that the series was written for the poet's sister Dorothy, but found the Lucy–Dorothy allusion "bizarre". Earlier, literary critic Richard Matlak tried to explain the Lucy–Dorothy connection, and wrote that Dorothy represented a financial burden to Wordsworth, which had effectively forced his separation from Coleridge. Wordsworth, depressed over the separation from his friend, in this interpretation, expresses both his love for his sister and fantasies about her loss through the poems. Throughout the poems, the narrator's mixture of mourning and antipathy is accompanied by denial and guilt; his denial of the Lucy–Dorothy relationship and the lack of narratorial responsibility for the death of Lucy allow him to escape from questioning his desires for the death of his sister. The series is generally considered to examine two broad themes: NATURE: According to critics, Wordsworth built his reputation as a "poet of nature". Early works, such as "Tintern Abbey", can be viewed as odes to his experience of nature. His poems can also be seen as lyrical meditations on the fundamental character of the natural world. Wordsworth said that, as a youth, nature stirred "an appetite, a feeling and a love", but by the time he wrote Lyrical Ballads, it evoked "the still sad music of humanity". The five "Lucy poems" are often interpreted as representing

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poetry at the department of english

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William Wordsworth born in 1770 is considered one the two fathers of The British Romantic Movement. In 1789 Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Colridge wrote a collection of poems entitled Lyrical Balladswich emulated the romantic poems that were becoming increasingly popular in Germany and France. Inspired by the beauty of Northearn Englands Lake District,the poems attempted to capture the human emotions in words. Emotions such as love, rejection and loss were very popular in the romantic era. And nowere is this more profound than in Wordsworths collection of 5 poems know as The Lucy Poems. Wordsworth wrote Lucy Poems while homesick on vacation with his older sister Dorothy. Each one of the 5 poems describes a narrator who is desperatly in love with a girl, in a small village, who dies before ever learning of the narrators true feelings. While many belive that there is no real life inspiration for Lucy, stating that Lucy is just an ideal concept of love and womenhood , others have argued that given the deepts of feelings Wordsworth seems to capture in his poems, maybe there really was a Lucy. Lucys true identity however remains one of the literate mysteries of all time. In 1980, Hunter Davies contended that the series was written for the poet's sister Dorothy, but found the LucyDorothy allusion "bizarre". Earlier, literary critic Richard Matlak tried to explain the LucyDorothy connection, and wrote that Dorothy represented a financial burden to Wordsworth, which had effectively forced his separation from Coleridge. Wordsworth, depressed over the separation from his friend, in this interpretation, expresses both his love for his sister and fantasies about her loss through the poems. Throughout the poems, the narrator's mixture of mourning and antipathy is accompanied by denial and guilt; his denial of the LucyDorothy relationship and the lack of narratorial responsibility for the death of Lucy allow him to escape from questioning his desires for the death of his sister. The series is generally considered to examine two broad themes:NATURE: According to critics, Wordsworth built his reputation as a "poet of nature". Early works, such as "Tintern Abbey", can be viewed as odes to his experience of nature. His poems can also be seen as lyrical meditations on the fundamental character of the natural world. Wordsworth said that, as a youth, nature stirred "an appetite, a feeling and a love", but by the time he wrote Lyrical Ballads, it evoked "the still sad music of humanity". The five "Lucy poems" are often interpreted as representing Wordsworth's opposing views of nature as well as meditations on the cycle of life. They describe a variety of relationships between humanity and nature. Wordsworth sometimes described nature more than Lucy herself. Although the poems evoke a sense of loss, they also hint at the completeness of Lucy's lifeshe was raised by nature and survives in the memories of others.DEATH: The narrator is affected greatly by Lucy's death and cries out in "She dwelt" of "the difference to me!". Yet in "A slumber" he is spared from trauma by sleep. Her death suggests that nature can bring pain to all, even to those who loved her. The "Lucy poems" often fail to distinguish the difference between life and death. They describe a rite of passage from innocent childhood to corrupted maturityMOODS:

The poems are about a muse: love, or object of affection, inspiration - loved from afar and the poet's/speaker dealing with the death of that person (Lucy). Compounding that grief is that Lucy was the inspiration for the poet's creativity. So, the mood is elegiac, melancholy. Other themes and moods are nostalgia, imagination and memory which dominate a lot of Wordsworth's poetry.