Both poems the impact nature can have on people however in the Prelude this has a physiological impact and in SOTI this has physical impact that can harm
the people.
‘Upreared its head’ ‘strode after me’ ‘Spits like a tamed cat, turned savage’
-use of personi cation helps the reader to imagine that the speaker sees -simile creates the idea that the sea is spitting at the islanders like a wild,
the mountain as a terrifying, ominous creature that looms over the narrator savage animal
and pursues them
-although the sea was ‘tame’ to some extent, Heaney warns that nature
-Wordsworth details that the mountain ‘strode after me’, which could will always be untameable at heart like a cat that has abandoned human
demonstrate the speaker’s concern that he is being chased by the companionship- re ects the way Heaney feels about the natural world.
untameable mountain, and rapidly tries to row his boat away from it.
-unpredictability of the weather
-power of nature makes him physiologically believe that the mountain is
alive and chasing him
‘Exploding comfortably’
‘A trouble to my dreams’ -oxymoron presenting that causing damage is an e ortless task for the
storm
-physiologically haunted by nature in his head -sea is beating violently against the island and assaulting it
-juxtaposition of the two words surprises reader and therefore has a
-speaker is haunted by the memories of his experience and cannot forget greater e ect on them- like the surprise of sea bashing against cli s
the overwhelming power of nature
-Wordsworth is unable to shake the experience and even when Context
Wordsworth leaves the wilds, it stays with him and lingers.
-violent nature of storm and the destruction that is caused could
-It is clear that the speaker of the poem has gone on a journey that has resemble some of the violent political disturbances Ireland has
changed his view about nature forever. experienced
- rst 8 letters of title spell STORMONT which was the name given to
Northern Ireland’s parliament building
Context
-Wordsworth based this poem on his own experiences as a child.
-The boat journey in this poem symbolises Wordsworth’s relationship with
nature throughout his life; he was always discovering more about nature,
and constantly re ecting upon its power and beauty.
fi
ff fi fl fl ff ff
the people.
‘Upreared its head’ ‘strode after me’ ‘Spits like a tamed cat, turned savage’
-use of personi cation helps the reader to imagine that the speaker sees -simile creates the idea that the sea is spitting at the islanders like a wild,
the mountain as a terrifying, ominous creature that looms over the narrator savage animal
and pursues them
-although the sea was ‘tame’ to some extent, Heaney warns that nature
-Wordsworth details that the mountain ‘strode after me’, which could will always be untameable at heart like a cat that has abandoned human
demonstrate the speaker’s concern that he is being chased by the companionship- re ects the way Heaney feels about the natural world.
untameable mountain, and rapidly tries to row his boat away from it.
-unpredictability of the weather
-power of nature makes him physiologically believe that the mountain is
alive and chasing him
‘Exploding comfortably’
‘A trouble to my dreams’ -oxymoron presenting that causing damage is an e ortless task for the
storm
-physiologically haunted by nature in his head -sea is beating violently against the island and assaulting it
-juxtaposition of the two words surprises reader and therefore has a
-speaker is haunted by the memories of his experience and cannot forget greater e ect on them- like the surprise of sea bashing against cli s
the overwhelming power of nature
-Wordsworth is unable to shake the experience and even when Context
Wordsworth leaves the wilds, it stays with him and lingers.
-violent nature of storm and the destruction that is caused could
-It is clear that the speaker of the poem has gone on a journey that has resemble some of the violent political disturbances Ireland has
changed his view about nature forever. experienced
- rst 8 letters of title spell STORMONT which was the name given to
Northern Ireland’s parliament building
Context
-Wordsworth based this poem on his own experiences as a child.
-The boat journey in this poem symbolises Wordsworth’s relationship with
nature throughout his life; he was always discovering more about nature,
and constantly re ecting upon its power and beauty.
fi
ff fi fl fl ff ff