The Prelude

Description

Mind Map on The Prelude, created by Big Boy on 09/11/2017.
Big Boy
Mind Map by Big Boy, updated more than 1 year ago
Big Boy
Created by Big Boy over 6 years ago
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Resource summary

The Prelude
  1. Language
    1. Wordsworth effectively describes the night-time atmosphere with his choice of images:
      1. "Small circles glittering idly in the moon, Until they melted all into one track Of sparkling light."
      2. Personification is also used by Wordsworth: he refers to the boat as "her" (which is quite common in literature from that historic period) and the mountain peak comes alive and chases him:
        1. This could be to show his connection to the boat and how it apeals to him or just because of the historic reasons
        2. The poem has a Iambic Pentameter
          1. This could be used to give the poem some flow as it is very long
          2. THEMES
            1. Nature: humanity is part of nature and sometimes we can be made to feel very small and insignificant by the natural world.
              1. The night: the poem seems to suggest that you can sometimes experience feelings and events more clearly at night, perhaps due to loneliness.
              2. Sudden change in subject
                1. This could be to show how quicly the mountains seemed to get closer
              3. Context
                1. It is a long autobiographical poem in 14 sections. The first version was written in 1798 but he continued to work on it throughout his lifetime. His wife Mary published it three months after his death in 1850.
                  1. William Wordsworth (1770-1850) is one of the most famous poets in the history of English Literature. He was born in Cockermouth in Cumbria, part of the region commonly known as the Lake District, and his birthplace had a huge influence on his writing.
                    1. Wordsworth was made Poet Laureate (the Queen's poet) in 1843. However, in 1847 he was badly affected by another death, that of his daughter Dora. He was said to be so devastated that he couldn't bring himself to write any more poetry.
                    2. Structure
                      1. There are no stanzas: the writing is continuous though there is plenty of punctuation to help us read it.
                        1. This extract is a complete story in itself. It starts with "One summer evening..." and finishes with the effects on his mind of the boat trip: "a trouble to my dreams".
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