Thursday, September 9, 2010

To Autumn


To Autumn is a great example of imagery. Autumn is my favorite season, so I may be biased, but I believe the picture drawn with these words is a beautiful one. I believe that Keats set this poem up to be in the format of a fall day. First, there are three stanzas which I believe represent morning, afternoon, and evening. The first stanza begins with talk of the beginning of fall when everything is "plump" and "ripe." He refers to a lot of fruit here in stanza one. Stanza two contains my favorite part of autumn, cider. I believe here he is explaining the middle days of fall where everything is being reaped because the end of fall is near. The last stanza represents the end of fall. Keats give the image of the sun setting. ("While barred clouds bloom the soft-dying day, and tough the stubble-plains with rosy hue") The day and the season are "soft[ly] dying." He says that "gnats mourn", "full-grown lambs bleat", and "the red-breast whistles softly." The last image he gives the reader is the image of swallows twittering and gathering food for the winter.

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