求Composed upon Westinister Bridge的赏析

1个回答

  • Today's poem makes an interesting contrast with the (presumably written in

    the same year) "London 1802" - the 'fen of stagnant waters' is nowhere in

    evidence, replaced instead by a sight 'touching in its majesty'.

    The city dweller in me notes that Wordsworth has exhibited his usual

    facility at both observation and description. The 'silent, bare' beauty of

    the morning, the city steeped in the early morning sun, the deep sense of

    calm, are as real, and as worthy of the poet's pen, as any babbling brook or

    forest glade.

    He also does a beautiful job of blending the images of the city and his own

    reactions to them into one organic whole[1], shifting voices effortlessly

    while never losing the central theme. And the last line is simply exquisite.

    [1] see my criticism of 'The Simplon Pass', poem #441

    Notes:

    Dorothy Wordsworth in her Journal July 31, 1802, described the scene as

    she and her brother left London, early in the morning, for their

    month-long visit to Calais: "It was a beautiful morning. The city, St.

    Paul's, with the river, and a multitude of little boats, made a most

    beautiful sight as we crossed Westminster Bridge. The houses were not

    overhung by their cloud of smoke, and they were spread out endlessly, yet

    the sun shone so brightly, with such a fierce light; that there was

    something like the purity of one of nature's own grand spectacles."

    -- http://www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/rp/poems/wordswor17.html

    [From the poem, I'd guess that it had rained the night before - m.]

    Links:

    We've run a number of Wordsworth's poems in the past - see the index at

    www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels

    And for previous poems that fit into the theme, or are just interesting to

    read alongside, see

    poem #5

    poem #119

    poem #154

    poem #319

    poem #361

    poem #382

    And doubtless many others

    -martin

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    From: Amit Chakrabarti

    I'd suggested this poem for the minstrels list way back

    when I was visiting London (that was over a year ago). For

    some reason T did not like it, so it had to wait for M to

    post I guess!

    -------------------------------------------------------------

    Amit Chakrabarti:

    Princeton, NJ, USA

    E-mail: amitc@

    URL: http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~amitc