Samuel Coleridge's "Frost At Midnight"
Beginning of paper
In the poem, "Frost at Midnight," Samuel Coleridge uses his
creative imagery and fascination with nature to create a beautiful picture
of the gifts God has given him and us. He uses a style of prose, which has
no particular rhyme or meter. This could be used to help convey his
meaning in a more ....
Middle of paper
.... bars." At first, it appears he
was very happy, "So sweetly, that they stirred and haunted me with a wild
pleasure…" But as this paragraph progresses, he begins to show the
loneliness in his life, "For still I hoped to see the stranger's face."
Though his mood begins to change there still is a calm and somber feeling.
In paragraph three, Colridge is holding his son, while appreciating
nature and what it will give to his child, "it thrills my heart with tender
gladness, thus to look at thee ....
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Word count: 356
Page count: 2 (approximately 250 words per page)