Saturday, July 20, 2019
Shelley and Keats :: essays papers
Shelley and Keats    Autumnal Theme in English Romantic Poetry:  Shelley^Ãâs "Ode to the West Wind"   and Keats^Ãâs "To Autumn."    A season of autumn is traditionally associated with transience  and mutability, with dying of nature and expectations of the  following winter time. For Romantic poets who are known for  their extraordinary sensitivity to natural moods the period of  fall becomes a great force for poetic creativity. Percy Bysshe  Shelley^s "Ode to the West Wind" and John Keats^s ode "To  Autumn" are two beautiful poems which were blown to its authors  by the English autumn ^ both poets are influenced by the  seasonal process in nature which ushers them into the mood of  transience and aging. However, the two of them differently  perceive the same natural manifestations. The radical poet  Shelley observes the deadly changes in nature caused by the  autumnal wind with an expectation for the following spring and  revival. In the seasonal process he sees a symbolic prototype  for possible revolutionary changes both in his own life and in  the existing social structure of his country. His "Ode to the  West Wind" !  primarily appeals to the active sublime  power of  the west wind to give him that energy which is able to change the  world. At the same time, another Romantic poet Keats drowsy accepts the  idea of aging and accomplishment ^ in his ode "To Autumn" he celebrates  fruitfulness of the autumn and bides farewell to the passing away year  and together with it to his great poetry.    The Romantic autumnal odes of Shelley and Keats are born from the  poetic observations of natural changes and from their ability to  penetrate the mood of fall  which provides them a incentive for  artistic creativity. In "Ode to the West Wind" Shelley mainly  concentrates his attention on his observations of the death caused by  the autumnal wind. He compares the "dead leaves" to "ghosts" (WW,  676/2-3), and the "winged seeds" ^ to dead bodies which "lie cold and  low... within [their] grave" (WW, 676/7-8). All these images talk to  the author of the "dying year" (WW, 677/24), of transience of time and  of aging. Little by little his mind becomes full of "dead  thoughts"(WW, 678/63) which overwhelm him after he penetrates the  autumnal mood of nature ^ thus his mind generates the mood of the  season and he becomes a part of it.  However, observing the autumnal  devastation Shelley knows that this season is not to rule over the  earth forever: for him it is just a period of "darkness which waits for  a redeemer" (Webb, p.178). He expects the time when "Spring shall blow"    					    
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