Shelley's Use of Nature in His Poems - Witarty

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Shelley's Use of Nature in His Poems


Percy Bysshe Shelley, the Revolutionary poet of English Romantic Period, makes use of nature as a automobile of his innovative perception and regeneration. He, inside the poem "Ode to the West Wind", considers it as a exquisite pressure of nature that can both smash and create. The wind also symbolizes 'the depression and hope' and 'the loss of life and rebirth'.

In the first phase of the poem "Ode to the West Wind", we find an imagery of dying I which all leaves are pushed away by way of the Wind as like as ghosts. As the poet says:

"O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being,
Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead
Are pushed, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,"

Here the West Wind symbolizes the Death or Destroy.

In the very subsequent imagery, we find the West Wind as a symbol of berth as it preserves the seeds by driving them underground until they germinate and fill the hills and plains with "residing shades and odours".

In the second phase of the poem, the amazing effect of the West Wind at the sky is defined.

In the 1/3 Shelley describes the commotion that the West Wind creates of the surface and the depth of the sea.

In the fourth segment, the poet transforms the poem from the sector of nature to the arena of humanity. Here he very skillfully connects 3 symbols from the character, leaf, cloud and wave, in a knot. As the poet says:

"If I had been a dead leaf thou mightest endure;
If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee;
A wave to pant underneath thy energy, and proportion"

Again, the poet invokes the Wind, the outstanding energy of nature, in his gained lifestyles and asks the Wind to regenerate him from the depression. He wants to proportion the impulse of the West Wind and lift him above the painful and depressing situation. As he says:

"Oh! Raise me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!
I fall upon the thorns of existence! I bleed!"

In the final segment of the poem, Shelley wants to regenerate the entire humanity with the aid of the use of the modern electricity of the Wind. He wishes the Wind blow over him and fill him with indomitable power that he needs to trade the arena. The poet desires to expel vain custom and conference as the Wind destroys the antique and dead leaves. The critical sprite of the Wind represents the sprite of the reformation. The poet desires to grow new buds in spring.

"Drive my useless mind over the universe
Like withered leaves to quicken a new start!"

Shelley believes that the regeneration usually follows the destruction. As he knows the extra night time becomes deep, the extra morning becomes close. So his poem "Ode to the West Wind" ends with the same expectation of regeneration.

"If Winter comes, can Spring be some distance in the back of?"

In his poem "Adonais" we also find the use of nature. Adonais has a remarkable love for beauties of nature and so the powers of nature come to mourn over his loss of life. When Adonais is killed with an arrow, shot inside the darkness, his mom Urania, the sprite of the poem, isn't always through his aspect. Urania cries and kisses the useless frame of Adonais. The poet additionally joins also in that mourning. By the use of nature, Shelley's agony over Keats dying becomes accepted and sublime.

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