The audience would be individuals who are interested in poetry and the poem itself. The goal is to convey the magnificent mysteries of nature and flowers. The poem's subject is a person standing outside, staring at a field of daffodils. This shows that someone ordinary can feel extraordinary when they think about something beautiful.
Daffodils are beautiful flowers that mean spring has come. We all know this feeling where you feel so happy and excited for the future even though it's still winter out there? That's what the poet was trying to get at with this poem. He wanted people to understand how wonderful nature is and that we should look after it.
Also worth mentioning is that the poet, William Wordsworth, lived in England. His job was not very useful because he was already well-known when he started writing poems. However, he hoped people would read his work one day so he kept on writing.
Finally, this poem is very important artistically because it uses different styles to describe what the poet wants to say.
The natural environment serves as the poem's principal setting. The exquisite aspects of this natural area stand out. It has undulating hills and valleys, a lake, trees, a bay, and, of course, an enormous field of daffodils. These flowers are I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.
Also present in the scene are several characters who play important roles in the story. They are a young boy named William Wordsworth (who is the main character) who lives with his family in England. He is a poet who wants to become famous. Around him live his sister Dorothy and their mother. In the daffodil field, he meets an old man named Mr. Daffodil who tells him that he should write a poem about his experience with the flower because it will make him famous.
So begins one of the most famous poems in the English language: "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud".
Some people may not like the subject matter of this poem because they think it's too emotional or sentimental. However, others may find it moving because it expresses how someone felt when they were far away from home for no apparent reason.
Wordsworth did indeed go home after this incident but he decided to leave his job as a teacher and stay there so he could write poems.
The poem describes discovering a field of daffodils alongside a lake, "which is the ecstasy of isolation," and how the recollection of it keeps him perpetually happy. The speaker's reverse personification produces a metaphor of comparing himself to a cloud, establishing a basic oneness between nature and man. This idea is further developed in the following stanza: "I am part of all that lives, / I feel what animals feel; / The blossom sees itself as one with the flower around it, / And the bird with the bird."
This figure of speech is used when someone expresses happiness at being by themselves or in their own company. It can also be applied to things that don't necessarily make people else than humans happy like flowers or birds. Indeed, some people say that they are inspired by mountains or oceans when in fact they are only happy thinking about other people.
In conclusion, this figure of speech is used when someone expresses happiness at being alone.