Lines 1-14
In this first of the five sections of the poem, the speaker begins to
define the domains and the powers of the West Wind. While stanza II
addresses the wind's influence on the sky, and stanza III discusses its
effects on the sea, stanza I describes the wind's effects on the land. The
autumn breezes scatter dead leaves and seeds on the forest soil, where
they eventually fertilize the earth and take root as new growth. Both
"Destroyer and Preserver" (line 14), the wind ensures the cyclical
regularity of the seasons. These themes of regeneration and the
interconnectedness of death and life, endings and beginnings, runs
throughout "Ode to the West Wind."The wind is, of course, more than simply
a current of air. In Greek and Latin — languages with which Shelley was
familiar — the words for "wind," "inspiration," "soul," and "spirit" are
all related. Shelley's "West Wind" thus seems to symbolize an inspiring
spiritual power that moves everywhere, and affects everything.
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Lines 2-3
These lines ostensibly suggest that, like a sorcerer might frighten
away spirits, the wind scatters leaves. But one might also interpret
"leaves dead" as forgotten books, and "ghosts" as writers of the past; in
this sense, the winds of inspiration make way for new talent and ideas by
driving away the memories of the old.
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Lines 4-5
The colors named here might simply indicate the different shades of the
leaves, but it is also possible to interpret the leaves as symbols of
humanity's dying masses. In this analysis, the colors represent different
cultures: Asian, African, Caucasian, and Native American. This idea is
supported by the phrase "Each like a corpse within its grave" in line 8
that could indicate that each person takes part in the natural cycle of
life and death.
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Lines 6-7
Here, the wind is described as a chariot that carries leaves and seeds
to the cold earth. This comparison gives the impression that the wind has
some of the aspects of those who are associated with chariots — gods and
powerful rulers.
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Line 8
The leaves are personified as people within their graves, an image that
harkens back to lines 4 and 5, where the leaves are considered as diseased
"multitudes" of people.
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Lines 9-12
In Greek and Roman mythology, the spring west wind was masculine, as
was the autumnal wind. Here, the speaker refers to the spring wind as
feminine, perhaps to stress its role as nurturer and life-giver. She is
pictured as awakening Nature with her energetic "clarion," which is a type
of medieval trumpet.
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Lines 13-14
At the conclusion of the first stanza, the speaker identifies the wind
as the powerful spirit of nature that incorporates both destruction and
continuing life. In fact, these two processes are said to be related;
without destruction, life cannot continue. At the end of line 14 is the
phrase "Oh hear!" that will be repeated at the end of stanzas 2 and 3.
This refrain emphasizes sound, which seems appropriate given that wind, an
invisible force, is the poem's central subject.
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Lines 15-28
In stanza II, the wind helps the clouds shed rain, as it had helped the
trees shed leaves in stanza I. Just as the dead foliage nourishes new life
in the forest soil, so does the rain contribute to Nature's regenerative
cycle.
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Lines 16-18
This passage has been heavily attacked by critics like F. R. Leavis for
its lack of concreteness and apparently disconnected imagery; others have
cited Shelley's knowledge of science, and the possibility that these
poetic phrasings might indeed be based on natural fact. The loose clouds,
for example, are probably cirrus clouds, harbingers (or "angels" as it is
put in line 18) of rain. As the leaves of stanza I have been shed from
boughs, these clouds have been shaken from the heavier cloud masses, or
"boughs of Heaven and Ocean" (line 17). In Latin, "cirrus" means "curl" or
"lock of hair"; it is thus appropriate that these clouds resemble a
Maenad's "bright hair" (line 20) and are referred to as the "locks of the
approaching storm" (line 23).
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Lines 20-23
When Shelley was in Florence, he saw a relief sculpture of four
maenads. These worshipers of the Roman god of wine and vegetation, Bacchus
(in Greek mythology, Dionysus) were wild, dancing women with streaming
hair. Here, the speaker compares the appearance of the cirrus clouds
streaked across the horizon with the maenads' blown tresses. This image
seems especially appropriate in that Bacchus/Dionysus is associated with
the natural world and the wind and clouds are primary elements of nature.
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Lines 23-28
The wail of the wind is compared to a song of grief, as if it were
mourning the "dying" year. As the year draws to a close, Nature prepares
for the funeral. The coming night is described as a "sepulcher," a burial
tomb that will be marked by lightning and hail from a storm. This last day
will end in darkness, under storm clouds.
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Lines 29-42
In stanza III, the West Wind wields its power over the sea; but unlike
the first two stanzas, this one is introduced by an image of calm, peace,
and sensuality. The Mediterranean Sea is pictured as smooth and tranquil,
sleeping alongside the old Italian town of Baiae. Once a playground of
Roman emperors, Baiae sunk as a result of volcanic activity and is now the
bed of a lush underwater garden. But the wind can also "waken" (line 29)
the sea and disturb the summer tranquility of the waters by ushering in an
autumn storm.
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Lines 32-33
In 1818, Shelley himself had sailed past the Bay of Baiae; in a
December letter to Thomas Love Peacock, he enthusiastically describes the
"ruins of its antique grandeur standing like rocks in the transparent sea
under our boat."
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Lines 36-38
Beginning at the end of line 36, the speaker disrupts the peace of the
seascape and reminds the West Wind of its power to churn up wild,
whitecapped surf.
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Lines 39-42
The lush sea foliage, which is "sapless" because the plants are
underwater, is aware of the wind's ability to destroy; remembering the
havoc of cold weather storms, the vegetation is drained of color, as a
person turns pale with fear, or as plant life on Earth fades in the fall.
In a note to these lines, Shelley wrote: "The vegetation at the bottom of
the sea, of rivers, and of lakes, sympathizes with that of the land in the
change of seasons, and is consequently influenced by the winds which
announce it." The natural cycles of death and regeneration thus continue
even underwater, with the aid of the West Wind.
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Lines 43-56
After three stanzas of describing the West Wind's power, which are all
echoed in the first three lines of Stanza IV, the speaker asks to be moved
by this spirit. For the first time in "Ode to the West Wind," the wind
confronts humanity in the form of speaker of the poem. No longer an
idealistic young man, this speaker has experienced sorrow, pain, and
limitations. He stumbles, even as he asks to be spiritually uplifted. At
the same time, he can recall his younger years when he was "tameless, and
swift, and proud" like the wind. These recollections help him to call on
the wind for inspiration and new life. In this manner, the poem suggests
that humans, too, are part of the never-ending natural cycle of death and
rebirth.
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Lines 47-52
In line 47, the speaker begins to explain that, as an idealistic youth,
he used to "race" the wind — and win, in his own mind. But now, as an
older man, he could never imagine challenging the wind's power.
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Lines 53-54
In these well-known lines often mocked by Shelley's detractors, the
patterns of sea, earth, and sky are recalled as the speaker asks to be
raised from his sorrows by the inspirational West Wind. He seems almost
Christ-like in his suffering, the "thorns of life" recalling the crown of
thorns worn by Christ during the crucifixion.
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Lines 55-56
The Christ-like image of the speaker continues here; his life
experiences have been heavy crosses for him to bear and have weighed him
down. And yet there still seem to be sparks of life and hope within him.
He can still recall when he possessed many of the wind's powers and
qualities.
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Lines 57-70
If Stanza IV is the explanation of why the West Wind is being invoked,
Stanza V is the prayer itself. The requests of the speaker seem to gather
speed much as the wind does; while he begins by asking to be moved by the
wind, he soon asks to become one with this power. As a breeze might ignite
a glowing coal, the speaker asks for the wind to breathe new life into him
and his poetic art. With his last question, the speaker reminds his
audience that change is on the horizon, be it personal or natural,
artistic or political.The lyre referred to in line 57 might be the Eolian
lyre or harp, its name derived from Eolus, god of the winds. This lyre is
a box with strings stretched across an opening. When the wind moves
through it, the eolian harp emits musical sounds. Many Romantic writers,
including Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his poem "The Eolian Harp", used the
instrument as a symbol for the human imagination that is played upon by a
greater power. Here, the speaker asks to be the West Wind's lyre, its
means of music and communication.
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Lines 58-62
Here, the speaker seems to accept his sorrows and sufferings; he
realizes that the wind's power may allow him to add harmony to autumn's
music. He is still sad, but he recognizes a sweetness in his pain: he is
part of a natural cycle, and will have a chance to begin again as both man
and poet. The speaker's growing strength is hinted at by the powerful
exclamations in lines 61 and 62.
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Lines 63-64
The wind blew leaves over the forest floor, fertilizing the soil; now,
the speaker asks the wind to scatter his timeworn ideas and writings
across the earth in hopes of inspiring new thoughts and works. Note the
word play on "leaves," which can be found either on trees or in books.
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Lines 65-67
In "A Defence of Poetry," Shelley wrote that "the mind in creation is
as a fading coal, which some invisible influence, like an inconstant wind,
awakens to transitory brightness." In asking the wind to fan — and
hopefully arouse — the dying embers of his words, the speaker seems to be
echoing this idea.
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Lines 68-69
These lines recall the angel's "clarion" of line 10, awakening the
earth from wintry slumber. The speaker here asks to become the
poet-prophet of the new season of renewal.
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Lines 69-70
Shelley originally framed the last two lines as a statement; phrased as
a question, the poem ends on a note of expectancy rather than affirmation.
The speaker has made his case and plea to assist the wind in the
declaration of a new age — but he has not yet received an answer. Along
with his audience, he breathlessly awaits a "yes", delivered on the wings
of the wind.
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Source: Exploring Poetry, Gale, 1997.