This ode to the west wind was written by Shelley on an autumn evening in 18 19, when he was caught in a storm in the forest near Florence. This poem has five stanzas, each in the form of a sonnet, including four staggered stanzas (rhyming with aba bcb cdc ded) and a set of couplets, each of which is an iambic pentameter. This rhythm and rhythm, coupled with the use of a large number of cross-line poems, are closely combined with the form and theme to form a series of lines of poems, which vividly simulate the invincible majestic atmosphere of the strong west wind, both vivid and vivid.
The poetic image is rich, the momentum is wild, the feelings are ups and downs, and it is full of philosophy, especially at the end of the sentence, "If winter comes, can spring be far behind?" It also inspired people who rebelled against the old world at that time and later all over the world, and became a timeless quatrain.