Daffodils by William Shakespeare

...eaning he is desperately lonesome and is looking for someone or something to make him happy and contented. Then all at once the speaker draws near a crowd of “daffodils.” These daffodils help to take away his desparity. There is an abundance if these daffodils far and wide “beside the lake”, “beneath the trees”, also “fluttering and dancing in the breeze.” In the second stanza the speaker observes how many daffodils there is for example “they stretched in never-ending line.” There are thousands of daffodils all in “sprightly dance.” It is impossible for one to be dismal when in the company of these merry and cheerful objects of nature. The speaker watches in amazement but doesn’t actually realize how delighted the daffodils and the sereneness of nature has made him in t...

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