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TO THE CUCKOO PRESENTATION

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Poem By: William Wordsworth Presentation Group: K McCafferty, N Porter, P Manmindar and L Neumann. To The Cuckoo The Poem O blithe newcomer! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TO THE CUCKOO PRESENTATION


1
TO THE CUCKOO PRESENTATION
  • Poem By William Wordsworth
  • Presentation Group K McCafferty, N Porter, P
    Manmindar and L Neumann.

2
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • O blithe newcomer! I have heard,I hear thee and
    rejoiceO Cuckoo! shall I call thee bird,Or but
    a wandering Voice?While I am lying on the
    grassI hear thy restless shoutFrom hill to
    hill it seems to pass,About. and all about!

3
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • To me, no Babbler with a taleOf sunshine and of
    flowers,Thou tellest, Cuckoo! in the valeOf
    visionary hours.Thrice welcome, darling of the
    Spring!Even yet thou art to meNo bird, but an
    invisible thing,A voice, a mystery

4
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • The same whom in my schoolboy daysI listened to
    that CryWhich made me look a thousand waysIn
    bush, and tree, and sky.To seek thee did I
    often roveThrough woods and on the greenAnd
    thou wert still a hope, a loveStill longed for,
    never seen!

5
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • And I can listen to thee yetCan lie upon the
    plainAnd listen, till I do begetThat golden
    time again.O blessed bird! the earth we
    paceAgain appears to beAn unsubstantial, faery
    place,That is fit home for Thee!

6
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • O blithe newcomer! I have heard,I hear thee
    and rejoiceO Cuckoo! shall I call thee bird,Or
    but a wandering Voice?While I am lying on the
    grassI hear thy restless shoutFrom hill to
    hill it seems to pass,About. and all about!To
    me, no Babbler with a taleOf sunshine and of
    flowers,Thou tellest, Cuckoo! in the valeOf
    visionary hours.Thrice welcome, darling of the
    Spring!Even yet thou art to meNo bird, but an
    invisible thing,A voice, a mystery
  • The same whom in my schoolboy daysI listened
    to that CryWhich made me look a thousand
    waysIn bush, and tree, and sky.To seek thee
    did I often roveThrough woods and on the
    greenAnd thou wert still a hope, a loveStill
    longed for, never seen!And I can listen to thee
    yetCan lie upon the plainAnd listen, till I do
    begetThat golden time again.O blessed bird!
    the earth we paceAgain appears to beAn
    unsubstantial, faery place,That is fit home for
    Thee

7
Extra or Background Facts
  • To the Cuckoo is one of Wordsworths more less
    known poems. Very little is around on the
    background information of this poem, therefore
    the information you receive today is almost
    entirely student analysis.
  • To the Cuckoo is an poem consisting of 8 stanzas.
  • The Poem has a regular, simple rhyme scheme of
    ABAB
  • The poem is addressed to a (the) Cuckoo. (not
    specified if he talks to the cuckoo from his past
    or one in present)
  • Some critics believe that the poem is actually a
    Cuckoo Song, written for the Cuckoo to portray a
    better connection.
  • The Cuckoo bird appears in various other poems of
    Wordworths. e.g. The Solitary Reaper and An
    Evening walk addressed to a young lady.
  • In journals of Dorothy Wordsworth it states that
    she too also heard the Cuckoo once in may 1st in
    1802 (not a figment of imagination)

8
Photos and Audio
Dideric Cuckoo Bird
  • Striped Rancho Cuckoo

Guira Caimen Cuckoo
Pied Cuckoo
9
To The Cuckoo The Poem
  • O blithe newcomer! I have heard,I hear thee
    and rejoiceO Cuckoo! shall I call thee bird,Or
    but a wandering Voice?While I am lying on the
    grassI hear thy restless shoutFrom hill to
    hill it seems to pass,About. and all about!To
    me, no Babbler with a taleOf sunshine and of
    flowers,Thou tellest, Cuckoo! in the valeOf
    visionary hours.Thrice welcome, darling of the
    Spring!Even yet thou art to meNo bird, but an
    invisible thing,A voice, a mystery
  • The same whom in my schoolboy daysI listened
    to that CryWhich made me look a thousand
    waysIn bush, and tree, and sky.To seek thee
    did I often roveThrough woods and on the
    greenAnd thou wert still a hope, a loveStill
    longed for, never seen!And I can listen to thee
    yetCan lie upon the plainAnd listen, till I do
    begetThat golden time again.O blessed bird!
    the earth we paceAgain appears to beAn
    unsubstantial, faery place,That is fit home for
    Thee

10
Summary
  • The Poem To the Cuckoo, written by William
    Wordsworth is a poem that is addressed to a
    Cuckoo bird. Wordsworth is lying on the grass,
    immersing himself in nature when he hears the
    sound of a Cuckoo bird crying. The Cuckoo birds
    cry strikes emotions in him that he has not
    visited since his childhood. He takes the birds
    cry to have a story behind it and true
    significance rather than disregarding the cry as
    most others would in this case. The cry makes
    Wordsworth recollect his childhood days when he
    first heard the bird. Its wandering voice leads
    him through the woods and valleys trying to find
    its origin, but he never finds the bird. The poem
    then brings us back to present day where
    Wordsworth can appreciate how the bird affects
    his memory. The poem ends with Wordsworth
    commenting that the bird is blessed and deserves
    to be in a mythical earth, where it resides.

11
Summary 2
  • This poem has been written in admiration and
    glorification of the cuckoo. The cuckoo becomes a
    symbol of beauty, innocence and childhood for the
    poet. The poet hears the cuckoo singing in a
    garden. Her song reminds him of the golden days
    of his childhood. The poet calls the cuckoo a
    happy stranger. He bears and enjoys her song bit
    is unable to see her. The cuckoo is more like a
    wandering voice than a bird to him.The cuckoo's
    double-cry seems to travel rapidly from hill to
    hill. Sometimes, it seems very near and some
    times very far away. The poet calls on the cuckoo
    but this is vain as he cannot trace her out. The
    poem presents a beautiful contrast between the
    poet and the cuckoo. The poet lives in the past.
    The cuckoo lives in the present.

12
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 1
  • O blithe newcomer! I have heard,
  • -Wordsworth is addressing the bird all throughout
    the poem, it is dedicated to the Cuckoo bird.
  • -Blithe Casual or carefree. Saying Oh blithe
    newcomer, Wordsworth is giving the bird the
    label of being merry and not being subject to the
    restriction of industrial life.
  • -I have heard means he knows the bird (birds
    cry)I hear thee and rejoice
  • -He is happy when he hears this birdO Cuckoo!
    shall I call thee bird,Or but a wandering Voice?
  • -He wonders if he should label it as just a bird,
    or is it a creature bigger than the realms of his
    comprehension?
  • -Wandering voice gives the bird the ability
    to be free and again not subject to regular human
    lifestyle restriction

13
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 2
  • While I am lying on the grassI hear thy restless
    shout 
  • -The poem then states it is present time when
    Wordsworth hears the birds constant cry (check
    above for a striped cuckoos call)From hill to
    hill it seems to pass,About, and all about!
  • -It seems to Wordsworth that the birds cry is
    echoing all around the hills he is in, the
    cuckoos call is passing around the area,
    submerging him into its song.

14
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 3
  • To me, no Babbler with a taleOf sunshine and of
    flowers,
  • -These two lines indicate that this birds cry
    has so much more attached to it than one would
    perceive. no Babbler indicates the bird is not
    meaningless and does not just babble.
  • -with a tale of sunshine and of flowers again
    portrays that the bird is not a meaningless
    creature with a story about flowers and sunshine,
    as most cuckoos songs would be.Thou tellest,
    Cuckoo! in the valeOf visionary hours.
  • -This cuckoo tells a story of visionary hours
    or times from the past. The cuckoos song has an
    attachment to Wordsworths past.

15
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 4
  • Thrice welcome, darling of the Spring!
  • -Wordsworth is happy to welcome the bird and its
    story. The thrice is an emphasis on his
    eagerness to invite the bird into his mentality.
    The Thrice may be an indication to his previous
    meetings with the bird.Even yet thou art to
    meNo bird, but an invisible thing, A voice, a
    mystery
  • -These lines say that Wordsworth has actually
    never seen the bird and that it is a mysterious
    voice. The bird has been hidden to him over the
    years, yet it can still strike emotions in him.

16
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 5
  • The same whom in my schoolboy days
  • -The cry is the same he heard as a child. The
    poem now enters into the pastI listened to that
    CryWhich made me look a thousand waysIn bush,
    and tree, and sky.
  • -As a child he heard the birds cry. Yet again the
    birds cry was able to submerge him in its echo,
    he becomes captured in its melody and fascinated
    in finding the bird.

17
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 6
  • To seek thee did I often rove
  • -The bird inspired him to seek it out. He did
    often rove looking for it, signifying that he
    had a deep attachment to this birds cry and that
    it was more than just a beautiful sound.Through
    woods and on the green
  • -Searching far and wide. Dedicated to finding
    it.And thou wert still a hope, a love
  • -He truly wants to find this bird. He still hopes
    to.Still longed for, never seen!
  • -a love, Still longed for, never seen!
    Wordsworth reveals his love for this bird. He now
    tells us that he did indeed love the bird and was
    for this reason he searched for it. He never
    found the the bird but still yearns to.

18
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 7
  • And I can listen to thee yet
  • -Poem enters present time again.Can lie upon the
    plainAnd listen, till I do beget
  • - Beget ProduceThat golden time again.
  • -The whole stanza only makes sense when analyzed
    together. He explains that now, he can hear the
    cuckoo birds cry while laying out in a field, and
    is able to produce the memories of what he
    considers his golden time. As a true romantic
    his years as a child are considered to be the
    best of his life (golden), and this Cuckoo bird
    is able to draw that emotion from him.

19
Analysis of Poem-Stanza 8
  • O blessed bird! the earth we pace
  • -O blessed bird! indicates again how the entire
    poem is addressed to the Cuckoo but also his
    love. He loves the bird and indicates that it
    bestows joy and happiness to him.Again appears
    to be
  • -Again he has visited this notion beforeAn
    unsubstantial, faery place,
  • -This is the line that most difficulty to
    translate to modern english was found on.
    unsubstantial can take on the meanings of
    immaterial, flimsy or not true, and our
    best guess is that the word faery can take on
    the meaning of a closely spelt word, fairy. We
    deduct that seeing as modern scholars have
    published versions of the poem with the word
    fairy in the place of faery. Therefore we
    feel that Wordsworth is trying to say that the
    earth that both of them share is not strong or
    concrete (in the figurative sense) and that it is
    actually a mystical place because it can hold
    such immense natural beauty at the same time as
    holding such distained industrial evil.
  • That is fit home for Thee
  • -Wordsworth ends the poem by indicating that a
    home of such great versatility, being able to
    house two such opposing phenomenon, is a suitable
    home for such a beautiful and beloved creature.

20
The Poem
  • O blithe newcomer! I have heard,I hear thee
    and rejoiceO Cuckoo! shall I call thee bird,Or
    but a wandering Voice?While I am lying on the
    grassI hear thy restless shoutFrom hill to
    hill it seems to pass,About. and all about!To
    me, no Babbler with a taleOf sunshine and of
    flowers,Thou tellest, Cuckoo! in the valeOf
    visionary hours.Thrice welcome, darling of the
    Spring!Even yet thou art to meNo bird, but an
    invisible thing,A voice, a mystery
  • The same whom in my schoolboy daysI listened
    to that CryWhich made me look a thousand
    waysIn bush, and tree, and sky.To seek thee
    did I often roveThrough woods and on the
    greenAnd thou wert still a hope, a loveStill
    longed for, never seen!And I can listen to thee
    yetCan lie upon the plainAnd listen, till I do
    begetThat golden time again.O blessed bird!
    the earth we paceAgain appears to beAn
    unsubstantial, faery place,That is fit home for
    Thee

21
The Poem
  • Cuckoo Bird,
  • I have heard you before and am glad to hear you
    again.
  • Shall I label you a bird or something greater?
  • Im lying here on the grass.
  • I hear your incessant cry.
  • It is everywhere.
  • You have a story, a meaningful one,
  • It doesnt talk of insignificant things.
  • You cuckoo bird, talk of things in another time.
  • I welcome you yet again amazing creature,
  • Even though I love you, I have never seen you.
  • You are mysterious to me.
  • I heard you once as a school boy.
  • Your cry fascinated me,
  • I was eager to find you
  • I looked for you often,
  • I went through forests and valleys for you.
  • I never lost hope that I would find you.
  • You were longer for but never seen!
  • And now I can still listen to you,
  • Lie here in the green again
  • And I can produce memories from the golden times
    of childhood.
  • You are an amazing creature!
  • This world does not hold truth,
  • It is so diverse, holding beauty and malice
  • This is the home for you!

22
Themes
  • There are several themes evident throughout "To
    The Cuckoo" Some of these are also seen in
    Wordsworth's other poems.Nature
  • Wordworths' opinion on nature is a central theme
    in "To the Cuckoo" as he sits taking in his
    surroundings listening to the song of the bird.
    Nature is a primary idea. In many of Wordsworths'
    works he illustrates his belief in romanticism
    and the deeper importance of being immersed in
    nature in response to the industrial revolution
    and the growing cities around him.Childhood and
    Memories
  • As Wordsworth sits listening to, and looking for
    the Cuckoo he cannot see, he finds himself
    revisiting his childhood memories and school boy
    days as he often heard the song of the Cuckoo,
    yet he could never find it. The characterisation
    of the bird allows Wordsworth to merge his past
    recollections with the present. This theme
    illustrates the greater significance of the poem
    this poem is wordsworthss way of expressing how
    the memory is a key factor in preserving the
    delights and pleasures of being in touch with a
    divine being through nature.

23
Themes
  • The Cuckoo birds cry is not only significant
    because he believes the cuckoo itself is an
    extraordinary creature and represents a higher
    being, but because the Cuckoos cry is a trigger
    for him. Wordsworth is able to access memories
    from decades before hand of the golden time in
    his childhood via the message the cuckoo brings.
    Wordsworth is not only trying to convey the idea
    that the cuckoo bird is an outstanding creature
    and that its cry signifies a memory trigger, but
    he wants the reader to understand that true
    romantic notions in a childhood truly leave those
    that believe in preserving the innocence of
    childhood, and that no matter how many years
    pass, the true romanticism will always live on in
    believers. Although children are best in touch
    with the Divine and do not have to be subject to
    the industrial age, adults such as Wordsworth
    that keep believing, will help preserve the
    romantic way.
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