The Prelude - Ice Skating
- Created by: Noah_S
- Created on: 26-01-19 12:56
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- Extract from,
The Prelude
- William Wordsworth
- 19th Century during the Romantic Period
- Beginning
- 'frosty
season' & 'cottage
windows blazed'
- The choice of frosty presents a pleasant, bracing scene. The windows that blazed adds a cheerful note whilst it is winter the images of beauty and warmth still shine.
- 'It was a time of rapture!'
- Wordsworth celebrates childhood showing that the boisterous fun is so great that it is like a religious experience.
- 'frosty
season' & 'cottage
windows blazed'
- Middle
- 'We hissed along the polished ice'
- The poet uses verbs to do with movement and sound elevating the kinetic energy that is associated with the children.
- ' the precipices rang aloud'
- The natural world is drawn as hard and frozen but it has its own voice. The verb 'rang' suggest the country side is almost alive.
- 'We hissed along the polished ice'
- End
- 'The orange sky of the evening died away'
- The final image reminds us of the dying sunshine. The day is ending and so is the year in the poem. It signifies the poet turning into an adult.
- 'an alien sound / Of melancholy'
- The idea of melancholy introduces us to a sense of sadness and insight into Wordsworth's nostalgia as these days of innocence is long gone.
- 'The orange sky of the evening died away'
- Context
- The Prelude was the first part of a 3 part epic poem called The Recluse
- Main themes: Man, Nature and Society
- Lived in the Lake District and spent most of his time outdoors as a way of escaping
- Romantic Poet
- Structure & Form
- The poem is written in blank verse - this means it has no rhyme scheme, but is still written in iambic pentameter
- one long verse
- William Wordsworth
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