London%201802 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

London%201802

Description:

London 1802 Author .William Wordsworth Introduction William Wordsworth was born on April 7, 1770. In Cockermouth Cumber land in the lake district. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:839
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: 199923
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: London%201802


1
London 1802
  • Author.William Wordsworth

2
Introduction
  • William Wordsworth was born on April 7, 1770. In
    Cockermouth Cumber land in the lake district.
  • His mother died when he was 8.
  • He went to Cambridge University.
  • He died on April 23, 1850.

3
The poem
  • Milton! thou shouldst be living at this
    hourEngland hath need of thee she is a fenOf
    stagnant waters altar, sword, and pen,Fireside,
    the heroic wealth of hall and bower,Have
    forfeited their ancient English dowerOf inward
    happiness. We are selfish menOh! raise us up,
    return to us againAnd give us manners, virtue,
    freedom, power.Thy soul was like a Star, and
    dwelt apartThou hadst a voice whose sound was
    like the seaPure as the naked heavens,
    majestic, free,So didst thou travel on life's
    common way,In cheerful godliness and yet thy
    heartThe lowliest duties on herself did lay.
  • "London, 1802 by William Wordsworth." The
    Literature Network Online Classic Literature,
    Poems, and Quotes. Essays Summaries. Web. 07
    Feb. 2011. lthttp//www.online-literature.com/keats
    /519/gt.

4
London 1802 paraphrased
  • Milton! I wish that you could return to Earth
    Every venerable institution religion, military,
    literature, and the home have lost touch of
    inward happiness, Which is an English birthright.
  • We are being selfish please raise us up and
    return to us, and teach us manners, virtues,
    freedom, and power.
  • His soul was as bright as a star, and stood apart
    from the crowd he did not need the approval or
    company of others in order to live his life as he
    pleased. His voice was powerful and influence as
    the sea itself, and though he possessed a kind
    moral perfection, he never ceased to act humbly.
  • "London, 1802 Analysis William Wordsworth
    Summary Explanation Meaning Overview Essay
    Writing Critique Peer Review Literary Criticism
    Synopsis Online Education." Writing Workshop, or
    Something. Web. 08 Feb. 2011. lthttp//www.eliteski
    lls.com/c/6384gt.

5
Diction
  • There were a lot of Obsolete words because this
    was written in the 1800s. Hard to understand for
    someone who isnt familiar with this.
  • Connotations Altar is the church, sword is the
    military, pen is literature, and fireside is
    home.

6
Tone and Mood
  • Wordsworth uses a melancholy tone and the sad
    theme to show how London is facing many problems
  • This poem creates a sad mood.
  • Wordsworth doesnt use any Irony.
  • This poem makes you sad because the people are in
    need of John Milton who was a great writer and
    person.

7
Rhetorical Situation
  • The poet is speaking to another poet whose name
    is John Milton and he has died, and he wishes
    that john was still alive and that his work help
    bring England together.
  • The reader overhearing the poet is speaking about
    John Milton and England.

8
Figurative Language
  • A voice whose sound was like the sea. Simile.
  • Pure as the naked winds. Simile.
  • Thy soul was like a star. Simile.
  • she is a fen of stagnant waters. Metaphor

9
Imagery
  • Thou hadst a voice whose sound was like the sea.
  • Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free.

10
Imagery cont.
  • I hear a voice that is longing for someone that
    is gone.
  • I can see that some one has pure soul and is very
    kind and generous to others.
  • Symbols are Altar represents English church,
    Sword represents British military, fireside
    stands for the security of the home, pen
    represents literature, and a Fen of stagnant
    waters represents that there is something rotten
    in the state of England.

11
Sound
  • Rhyme fen and pen, bower and dower, men and
    again.
  • Lines 1-8 octave ABBAABBA
  • Lines 9-14 sestet CDDECE
  • No alliteration.
  • Not many harsh or discordant words. Poem is
    serious so there really isnt anything pleasing.

12
Poem structure
  • 14 lines, sonnet
  • Free verse, the poem is all grouped together.
  • Iambic pentameter.

13
Conclusion/ Evaluation
  • We think that the author did a good job on the
    poem, we think that it was cool how we got to
    over hear someone talking about this great man
    John Milton and all of his accomplishments,
    sounded like the person was mourning him wishing
    that he was still alive and making wonderful
    poetry/literature because Englands current
    Poets/writers arent doing much more England.
  • When the speaker talks about altar, sword, and
    pen,Fireside. We can imagine, religion,
    military, and literature, and the household.
  • The Poems rhyme scheme went well with the poem
    and didnt confuse or distract us.

14
Personal Reactions
  • At first we didnt really understand what the
    speaker was talking about, after reading some
    summaries we began to understand it and it wasnt
    that bad(good thing it was short).
  • It taught us that one person who doesnt have to
    have high power or lead groups can change a
    nation just by his writings.
  • I think this poem may in a way relate to us,
    because we are great writers and maybe just maybe
    our writings can change this country!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com