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In the heartbreaking poem "Lucy Gray" by Wordsworth, Lucy Gray "dwelt on a wide Moor."
William Blake was a precursor to Wordsworth and Coleridge, influencing their romantic poetry with his mystical and visionary works. Thomas Gray, on the other hand, was a predecessor to the Romantic poets, including Wordsworth and Coleridge, with his elegiac and lyrical style paving the way for their experimentation with nature and emotion in poetry.
William Wordsworth called Lucy Gray "the solitary child" because she is portrayed as a solitary figure in nature, wandering alone in the snow and eventually disappearing. The poem focuses on her solitude and the sense of loss and absence that her disappearance creates.
"Lucy Gray" by William Wordsworth is a narrative poem that tells the story of a young girl named Lucy who gets lost in a snowstorm. The poem explores themes of nature, innocence, and the fleeting nature of life. It is written in a simple and lyrical style, characteristic of Wordsworth's Romantic poetry.
yes, lucy gray the poem by wordsworth is the real story of a girl that does exactly what the poem tells us. The only difference is in the end of the poem were the real story is that the girl drowned and her body was later found in a canal but wordsworth says that the girl is still alive in nature.
William Gray III's birth name is William Herbert Gray III.
William Percival Gray died in 1992.
William Percival Gray was born in 1912.
William Crane Gray died in 1919.
William G. Gray died in 1992.
William M. Gray was born in 1929.
George William Gray was born in 1926.