hello to all my friends here who are student and learning peotry or poems..
well i have peotry by William Wordsworth named ( three years she grew )
and i need for you to explain it to me
so if you get any ideas about it please help me and i really need your help here..... :(
i have to finish it this weekend,,,,
help me
Three Years She Grew
Moderator: EC
- eman
- Rising Star
- Posts: 74
- Joined: Sat Jan 07, 2006 1:36 pm
- Location: country of peace and love
- eman
- Rising Star
- Posts: 74
- Joined: Sat Jan 07, 2006 1:36 pm
- Location: country of peace and love
stanzas of the peom
three years she grew in sun and shower
then nature said," a lovelier flower
on earth was never sown;
this child I to myself will take"
she sahll be mine, and I will make
A lady of my own
"myself will to my darling be
both law and impluse; and with me
the girl and heave, in glade and bower,
shall feel an everseeing power
to kindle or resrtain.
"she shall be sportive as the fawn
that wild with glee across the lawn
or up the mountain springs;
and hers shall silence and the calm
of mute insensate things.
"the floating clouds their state shall lend
to her; for her the willow bend;
nor shall she fail to see
even in the motions of the storm
Grace that shall mould the Maiden's from
by silent sympathy
" the stars of midnight shall be dear
to her; and she shall lean her ear
in many a secert place
where rivulets dance their wayward round,
and beauty born of murmuring sound
shall pass into her face.
" and vital feeling of delight
shall rear her from to stately height,
her virgin bosom swell;
such thoughts to Lucy I will give
while she and I together live
here in this happy dell."
" thus Nature spake---the words was done---
how soon my Lucy's race was run!
she died, and left me
this health, this calm and quiet scene;
the memory of what has been,
and never more will be.
this is the stanzas of the peom
hope to enjoy it and analysis it
thanks
then nature said," a lovelier flower
on earth was never sown;
this child I to myself will take"
she sahll be mine, and I will make
A lady of my own
"myself will to my darling be
both law and impluse; and with me
the girl and heave, in glade and bower,
shall feel an everseeing power
to kindle or resrtain.
"she shall be sportive as the fawn
that wild with glee across the lawn
or up the mountain springs;
and hers shall silence and the calm
of mute insensate things.
"the floating clouds their state shall lend
to her; for her the willow bend;
nor shall she fail to see
even in the motions of the storm
Grace that shall mould the Maiden's from
by silent sympathy
" the stars of midnight shall be dear
to her; and she shall lean her ear
in many a secert place
where rivulets dance their wayward round,
and beauty born of murmuring sound
shall pass into her face.
" and vital feeling of delight
shall rear her from to stately height,
her virgin bosom swell;
such thoughts to Lucy I will give
while she and I together live
here in this happy dell."
" thus Nature spake---the words was done---
how soon my Lucy's race was run!
she died, and left me
this health, this calm and quiet scene;
the memory of what has been,
and never more will be.
this is the stanzas of the peom
hope to enjoy it and analysis it
thanks