Daffodils — William Wordsworth

The Poem

I wandered lonely as a cloud That floats on high o'er vales and hills, When all at once I saw a crowd, A host, of golden daffodils; Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

Continuous as the stars that shine And twinkle on the milky way, They stretched in never-ending line Along the margin of a bay: Ten thousand saw I at a glance, Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

The waves beside them danced; but they Out-did the sparkling waves in glee: A poet could not but be gay, In such a jocund company: I gazed — and gazed — but little thought What wealth the show to me had brought:

For oft, when on my couch I lie In vacant or in pensive mood, They flash upon that inward eye Which is the bliss of solitude; And then my heart with pleasure fills, And dances with the daffodils.


Stanza-by-Stanza Analysis

Stanza 1 — The Encounter

The poet is wandering AIMLESSLY ('lonely as a cloud'). Suddenly he sees a MASS of daffodils — 'a crowd, a host.' The flowers are PERSONIFIED — they are 'fluttering and dancing.' The setting: 'beside the lake, beneath the trees' — PERFECT natural beauty.

LineTechniqueEffect
'I wandered lonely as a cloud'SIMILECompares himself to a cloud — free, drifting, ALONE
'A host, of golden daffodils'METAPHORThe daffodils are an ARMY of joy
'Fluttering and dancing'PERSONIFICATIONThe flowers are ALIVE with emotion

Stanza 2 — The Vastness

The daffodils are COMPARED to stars — 'continuous as the stars that shine.' This is HYPERBOLE: 'ten thousand saw I at a glance.' The sight is INFINITE, overwhelming, UNFORGETTABLE.

Key figure: Simile — 'Continuous as the stars that shine and twinkle on the milky way.' The comparison emphasises BOTH the number AND the beauty of the flowers.

Stanza 3 — The Poet's Joy

The waves 'danced' too — but the daffodils 'out-did the sparkling waves in glee.' The poet is 'gay' in their company. The PIVOTAL moment: 'I gazed — and gazed — but little thought / What wealth the show to me had brought.'

'This is the MOST IMPORTANT LINE in the poem for ICSE. The poet does NOT REALISE in the moment what the experience will mean. The TRUE value of the daffodils will only be known LATER — in MEMORY.'

Stanza 4 — The Inward Eye

'Alone, on his couch, in "vacant or in pensive mood," the memory of the daffodils FLASHES upon his "inward eye" — and his heart fills with pleasure. The experience is REPLAYED in memory. The poem ends where it began — with DANCING. But now it is the poet's HEART that dances, not the daffodils.'


Key Themes for ICSE

ThemeExplanationEvidence
Nature as HEALERNature provides JOY that sustains the soul'A poet could not but be gay'
Memory as TREASUREThe 'inward eye' — experiences live on in memory'What wealth the show to me had brought'
Solitude and CONTEMPLATIONTrue joy is FELT in reflection, not just in the moment'The bliss of solitude'
Imagination vs RealityThe IMAGINED daffodils are MORE powerful than the real ones'They flash upon that inward eye'
Romantic CONNECTIONMan and nature are SPIRITUALLY connectedHeart 'dances with the daffodils'

Figures of Speech — Complete Table for ICSE

FigureExampleEffect
Simile'I wandered lonely as a cloud'Suggests FREEDOM and aimlessness
Simile'Continuous as the stars that shine'Suggests ENDLESSNESS and beauty
Personification'Tossing their heads in sprightly dance'Daffodils are HUMAN — joyful, alive
Personification'The waves beside them danced'Nature is ALIVE with joy
Hyperbole'Ten thousand saw I at a glance'Exaggeration for EMOTIONAL impact
Alliteration'Beside the lake, beneath the trees'Musical QUALITY — rhythm and flow
Alliteration'What wealth the show to me had brought'Emphasises the TRANSFORMATION
Metaphor'A host, of golden daffodils'Daffodils are an ARMY of joy

The 'Inward Eye' — Central ICSE Concept

'This is the MOST FREQUENTLY TESTED concept from this poem. The "inward eye" is the IMAGINATION — the faculty that allows us to RELIVE beautiful experiences in memory.'

  • The poet was ALONE when he saw the daffodils
  • He was ALONE when he REMEMBERED them
  • BUT — in BOTH cases, the daffodils brought JOY
  • The 'inward eye' TRANSFORMS solitude into 'bliss'

ICSE question: 'What is the "wealth" the daffodils brought?' Answer: Not MONEY — but SPIRITUAL wealth. The memory of beauty that sustains the soul in times of sadness.


Common Mistakes in ICSE Answers

MistakeCorrection
Calling 'inward eye' a figure of speechIt is a METAPHOR for imagination/memory
Forgetting Stanza 3's TURNThe poem SHIFTS from description to REFLECTION at 'I gazed and gazed'
Treating the poem as ONLY about daffodilsIt is about MEMORY and the POWER of imagination
Ignoring WORDSWORTH as a Romantic poetMention Romanticism — nature as teacher, emotion, simplicity
Missing the FINAL stanza's shiftThe poet's HEART dances — not the daffodils (INTERNAL vs EXTERNAL)

ICSE Exam Focus — Marks Blueprint

Question TypeMarksFrequency
Paraphrase and analyse any stanza4-6Very High
Explain the 'inward eye'4-5Very High
Identify and explain figures of speech3-5Always
Theme of nature and memory6-8High
Role of SOLITUDE in the poem4-6Medium
Compare with another Romantic poem8-10Medium

Self-Test

  1. Figure of speech: Identify the figure in 'I wandered lonely as a cloud.' What does it suggest about the poet's state of mind?

  2. The turning point: What does the poet mean by 'what wealth the show to me had brought'? Why did he not REALISE this wealth at the time?

  3. The final stanza: Explain the meaning of 'the inward eye' and 'the bliss of solitude.'

  4. Theme: How does Wordsworth show that NATURE can heal HUMAN sadness? Provide TWO examples from the poem.

  5. Structural: The poem has FOUR stanzas of six lines each. What is the RHYME SCHEME? How does the FINAL couplet of each stanza function?

  6. Comparative: How is this poem TYPICAL of Romantic poetry? Mention at least THREE Romantic characteristics.

  7. Critical: 'The daffodils in memory are MORE valuable than the daffodils in reality.' Do you agree? Justify.


Answers to Self-Test (Key Points)

  1. SIMILE. The poet feels DRIFTING, aimless, detached from human company. The cloud is ALONE in the sky — as the poet is alone in nature.

  2. 'Wealth' = SPIRITUAL treasure. The memory of beauty that will sustain him in solitude. He did not realise it because he was LOST in the moment — true appreciation comes in REFLECTION.

  3. 'Inward eye' = IMAGINATION / MEMORY. 'Bliss of solitude' = the JOY that comes from being alone with happy memories. The poet NEEDS solitude to access this 'inward eye.'

  4. (1) The sight of the daffodils makes him 'gay' — immediate healing. (2) The memory 'fills his heart with pleasure' — lasting healing. Nature provides BOTH immediate AND enduring joy.

  5. Rhyme: ABABCC. The final couplet SUMMARISES or EMPHASISES the stanza's main idea. In stanza 4, the couplet RESOLVES the entire poem — 'And then my heart with pleasure fills, / And dances with the daffodils.'

  6. (1) Nature as a SPIRITUAL teacher. (2) Simple language and everyday experience. (3) Emotion and IMAGINATION over reason. (4) The individual's SUBJECTIVE experience.

  7. YES: The memory is PERMANENT, can be accessed ANYTIME, and is MORE powerful because it is amplified by imagination. The real daffodils were TRANSIENT — the memory is ETERNAL.

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