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Both the poets discussed how splendor the daffodils were, but in a very resembling manner. However, poem written by William Word worth has an edge over his sister’s prose, thanks to his differentiated writing style. So the similarity in their work can be of the description of daffodils which seems to be most likely reason behind the walks of the individuals. Taking a look at the prose which was written by Dorothy, which stated off with the beautiful discussion of what he weather was like, the stormy evening , whereas on the other hand, William Wordsworth makes use of a simile of being the cloud which is very much related to the picture painted by Dorothy of the gloomy weather.
Similar to the cloud which according to Wordsworth ‘floats on high vales and hill’, and when they come to the stretch of land where Dorothy describes there are abundant daffodils spread across the patch beautifully. She wrote in her prose, “tossed and reeled and danced and seemed as if they verily laughed, whereas on the other hand, William Wordsworth, using almost the same expressions to describe the beauty of the daffodils stated in his poem, flowers “fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
” The description of the flowers wrote by the two poets are almost the same, but the way they can be interpreted are different. Where on one side William starts off the poem by stating the eloquence of the daffodils and comes to a beautiful end where he delightfully remembers the walk he once had with his sibling, on the other hand Dorothy states how the walks are the occurrences of just some days where the mere observations of the exquisite scenery takes place. In the prose of Tintern Abbey , Dorothy states, “The Bay’s were stormy and we heard the waves at different distances and in middle of the water like the sea”, whereas the lines written by William Wordsworth are well elaborated ones where he writes, “The waves beside the [flowers] danced; but they outdid the sparkling waves in glee.
” The way both the writers made the ending lines are quite different as well, where each added a different finishing touch to the poem. Dorothy in Tintern Abbey states that the tiring end comes to a good end with the family supper and the thirst quenching water and rum. Whereas if we pay attention to William Wordsworth’s work, he ends the poem with a deeper meaning stating the inner satisfaction and the gratitude that he got from the walk he had with his sibling, “.heart with pleasure fills and dances with the daffodils.
” When you start reading Wordsworth’s poems, you will notice that there in no depth in the feelings, whereas if you take in to consideration how he had put the beautiful effects the nature had on the human inner mind, and how encompassed with the beauty of nature, the reader will find more meaning attached to it. It was like Wordsworth’s mind had slipped into a meditation which helped him escape from the worries and the thoughts that he had indulged himself into. When he compared himself to a cloud it represented that this walk in to the exquisiteness of the nature had helped him in getting light, as light as a cloud.
It can be said that this particular poem written by Wordsworth is very much same to the work that he had written earlier, which is that the mind of the poet gets
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