On Shelley's ode to the west wind from the Three Beauties of Poetry

Ode to the west wind is one of the representative works of Shelley, a great English lyric poet in the19th century. In his poems, the poet regards the west wind as a symbol of revolutionary power, sweeping away fallen leaves, residual clouds and shaking the sea, and is an omnipresent "unruly spirit". At the same time, the west wind has played a role in protecting and promoting new things, and is a "destroyer and protector". The poet is willing to make a prophetic horn, telling people that winter has come, oh, west wind, can spring be far behind? This famous poem has inspired countless revolutionaries for more than a hundred years.

Ode to the west wind's poem is full of imagination, profound artistic conception, profound thoughts and strong feelings, and it has reached a brilliant realm in art.