UPON WESTMINISTER BRIDGE-SUMMARY- 500 WORDS
SUMMARY
In lines
1 through 8, which together compose a single sentence, the speaker describes
what he sees as he stands on Westminster Bridge looking out at the city. He
begins by saying that there is nothing "more fair" on Earth than the
sight he sees, and that anyone who could pass the spot without stopping to look
has a "dull" soul. The poem takes place in the "beauty of the
morning," which lies like a blanket over the silent city. He then lists
what he sees in the city and mentions that the city seems to have no pollution
and lies "Open unto the fields, and to the sky."
In lines
9 through 14, the speaker tells the reader that the sun has never shone more
beautifully, even on nature ("valley , rock, or hill"), and that he
has never seen or felt such deep calm. He goes on to describe the way that the
river (which he personifies) glides along at the slow pace it chooses. The poem
ends with an exclamation, saying that "the houses seem asleep" and
the heart of the city is still.
"Composed
upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802" is an Italian sonnet, written
in iambic pentameter with ten syllables per line. The rhyme scheme of the poem
is abbaabbacdcdcd. The poem was actually written about an experience that took
place on July 31, 1802 during a trip to France with Wordsworth's sister, Dorothy Wordsworth.
The poem
begins with a rather shocking statement, especially for a Romantic poet:
"Earth has not anything to show more fair." This statement is
surprising because Wordsworth is not speaking of nature, but of the city. He
goes on to list the beautiful man-made entities therein, such as "Ships,
towers, domes, theatres and temples." In fact, nature's influence isn't
described until the 7th line, when the speaker relates that the city is
"open to the fields, and to the sky." While the city itself may not
be a part of nature, it is certainly not in conflict with nature. This
becomes even more clear in the next line, when the reader learns that the air
is "smokeless" (free from pollution).
Wordsworth
continues to surprise his reader by saying that the sun has never shone more
beautifully, even on natural things. He then personifies the scene, giving life
to the sun, the river, the houses, and finally to the whole city, which has a
symbolic heart. The reader imagines that the city's heart beats rapidly during
the day, while everything and everyone in it is bustling about, but now, in the
early morning hours, the city's heart is "lying still." By using
personification in his poem, Wordsworth brings a kind of spirit to the city,
which is usually seen as a simple construction of rock and metal.
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