This poem is a beautiful example of romantic poetry. The poem is a good example of Wordsworth’s belief in communication between nature and man, and the healing power of nature.
The first speaker of the poem saw a large number of daffodils as he wandered about without any definite purpose. His mind was free of any practical or worldly tension. Daffodils appeared to him as a multitude of living things. Like a group of merry dancers, they had been dancing in a pleasant breeze. They made sounds like the sounds of the wings of flying birds.
These daffodils, which grew along the belt between the shore and the lake water, seemed to laugh together with joy and joy. The speaker who had been walking with an empty mind in a passive mood could not help but respond to the happy sight. He was moved by the joy of the daffodils. They touched his heart and left a permanent impression of happiness there. The overwhelmed speaker kept staring at these flowers for a long time not knowing that this sight would help him overcome mental depression in the future. Later, whenever he feels lonely and nostalgic, that happy vision revives in his mind. Your heart begins to dance like those daffodils dancing. This memory helps you to forget all the anxieties present. It provides you comfort and comfort. Relive your “cool spirit”.
The poem is therefore about the influence of nature on the human mind. Each of the stanzas consists of six verses that rhyme ababcc. The couplet at the end of each stanza enhances spontaneity. The poet has carefully constructed a happy and joyful atmosphere by selecting suitable objects, colors and moods. Daffodils are “golden” in color and sparkle and shine. The tetrameter verses ensure the smooth and spontaneous movement necessary to create such a jovial atmosphere. The first fourteen lines have been used to describe the daffodils and create their ecstatic mood. The last eight lines have been used to describe the influence of that happy vision on the mind of the speaker, a man who discovers a communion between himself and nature.
The poet used various figures of speech here to create the right atmosphere and mood necessary to establish a communion between the speaker and the daffodils that symbolize nature. The words, the figures and the rhyme scheme together constitute a joyful tone, in keeping with happy communion.