"The Solitary Reaper" by William Wordsworth. Poem analysis.
Date Submitted: 12/08/2003 13:00:23
Its an analzis of a poem by William Wordsworth -
Jennifer Lasky
Ms. Grant
English 10 per 6
April 7, 1997
The Solitary Reaper
By William Wordsworth (1770-1850).
"The Solitary Reaper", is a poem divided in four different stanzas, and each stanza has eight lines. Throughout the course of the poem Wordsworth's voice evolves from being an outsider voice into an insider voice; simultaneous, to the evolution of the voice, Wordsworth uses different ways and means to present the
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the world as (her) music, because music can express all those feelings that words can not. And again, if relate the last two lines of the previous stanza with the last two of this one, Wordsworth states that he is the singer, or the maiden that sings forever more, because he is one the who feels the "sorrow, loss, or pain.
The rhyme scheme this poem is:
A
B
C
B
D
D
E
E
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