Poets use romantic techniques and various rhetoric to praise larks and express their feelings.
Shelley (1792- 1822) is a famous British writer and romantic poet. 1822 died in the sea storm on July 8, under the age of 30. His epitaph is quoted from Shakespeare's The Tempest: He didn't disappear anything, but he felt the change of the sea and became a rich and rare treasure.
Engels called him a "genius prophet". In addition, Shelley is also known as "a poet among poets". His most famous works are ode to the west wind, Prometheus Liberated and Lark. Shelley's poems are very symbolic. He often expresses his pursuit of light and freedom by describing the power of nature. The fantasy, free way of describing nature, wonderful metaphor and musicality of language in Shelley's works constitute the complex and changeable artistic style of Shelley's lyric poems.
"Like a light cloud in a fire" in To the Lark vividly depicts the scene of a lark jumping up and singing while flying, which is also a spiritual portrayal of the poet's contempt for dark reality, pursuit of bright truth and courage to sacrifice for his ideal. Use visual images (synaesthesia) such as "sharp arrow of starlight" and "bright moon" to describe the beautiful feeling of hearing and turn abstraction into concrete. Comparing larks to "poets" highlights that larks can bring people hope and awaken people's souls.