Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Comaprison Of Nature


Comparison of Nature

Both Shelley, in "Ode to the West Wind," and Wordsworth, in "Intimations of Immortality," are very similar in their use of nature to describe the life and death of the human spirit.   As they both describe nature these two poets use the comparison of how the Earth and all its life is the same as our own human life. I feel that Shelley uses the seasons as a way of portraying the human life during reincarnation.   Wordsworth seems to concentrate more on the stages that a person goes through during life.   Shelley compares himself to such things as clouds, leaves, and waves.   He is writing the poem as if he were an object of the earth, and what it is like to once live and then die only to be reborn.   On the other hand, Wordsworth takes images like meadows, fields, and birds and uses them to show what gives him life.   Life being what ever a person needs to move on, and with out those objects can't have life.   Wordsworth does not compare himself to these things like Shelley, but instead uses them as an example of how he feels about the stages of living.   Starting from an infant to a young boy into a man, a man who knows death is coming and can do nothing about it because it's part of life.

When a man becomes old and has nothing to look forward to he will always look back, back to what are called the good old days.   These days were full of young innocence, and no worries.   Wordsworth describes these childhood days by saying that "A single Field which I have looked upon, / Both of them speak of something that is gone: The Pansy at my feet Doth the same tale repeat: Whither is fled the visionary gleam?   Where is it now, the glory and the dream?"(190)   Another example of how Wordsworth uses nature as a way of dwelling on his past childhood experiences is when he writes "O joy! That in our embers / Is something that doth live, / That nature yet remembers / What was so fugitive!" (192) Here an ember represents our fading years through life and...

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