Thursday, February 17, 2011

"We Are Seven" and "Simon Lee"

I really like the idea from “Simon Lee” by Wordsworth that spoke about how people treat each other. At the end, the line says that the speaker is mourning that Simon Lee was so grateful. I took this to mean that the speaker was sad that this man was in such a desperate situation and had no help that he could only be grateful. While I didn’t see the same gratefulness theme in “We Are Seven,” also by Wordsworth, I spotted the idea about treatment of others in society.

In “We Are Seven” the speaker is trying to take away a belief from the little girl and undermining her by constantly reminding her that there are only five siblings left. The little girl is adamant about the fact that there are seven of them. Though the speaker likely wasn’t trying to be rude, he was underestimating the girls capacity to cope with grief and understand what happens in death. As a societal problem, this discrediting of children (who are definitely more perceptive than people give them credit for) is what leads to the mistreating of people later in life. I think there is both a belief that people don’t know how to handle situations and a belief that people should “pull themselves up by their bootstraps.”

I think Wordsworth would have experienced this mal-intention when he was prepping for his travels and putting together his poems. He writes often about industrialization and its effects on society and human treatment but then writes this poem about people who are living these exceedingly simple lives, as though he is focusing on the contrast. The little girl plays with her siblings, sews and visits the graves of her other siblings. They live in Northern Wales along the sea, which, as in "Simon Lee", is rather separated from London. I think Wordsworth does a lot to contrast these ideals, simplicity and machination, as a way to explain society’s interpersonal flaws.

2 comments:

  1. Good! Like several of the entries this week, this could have used a tad more proofreading.

    "the idea from 'Simon Lee' by Wordsworth that spoke about" --says the idea spoke. Instead just say "the idea... about."

    There's a typo here: "the girls capacity"

    instead of "machination" I think you meant "indistrialization?" or "mechanization?"

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  2. Interesting blog post!
    I am working on an assignment that includes comparing both poems and your insights come in handy :)

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