Mainly taken around Grasmere and Rydal Water where William Wordsworth lived and was inspired to write his famous
daffodil poem.
When I was in school,
the Daffodils poem by William Wordsworth was one of my favourites.
Not exact matches
Hall, after consulting with their poet friends, decided to include the
poem in both A Hundred White
Daffodils and Collected
Poems.
It had inspired me to draw sketches of how he would have actually stood beside the lake and beneath the trees beside a host of golden
daffodils wearing an authentic English man's coat and hat, totally mesmerized by the view!!!! Now, when I saw these
daffodils, my mind started reciting the
poem and I was mesmerized too...
This simple
poem, written in simple iambic heptameter, will give them an ideal resource to follow in their own writing, eg There was a little butterfly There was a little bumble bee There was a yellow
daffodil There was a great big elephant There was a hungry crocodile Get the children to clap to these sentences and learn that a syllable is a sound and there are 4 in these lines.