Ode To Autumn:John Keats The music of Ripeness and stillness

 John Keats’s “To Autumn”, The Music of Ripeness and Stillness



One of the most perfect odes in the entire body of English poetry is the “To Autumn” of Keats, which is a very beautiful and nevertheless very mature work. It depicts the seasonal loveliness, a idea that is not done by lament, but rather by plenty, of the sound, scent, and color. The piece at last dwells on the very hour of growth surrender in which life begets the most luscious stage before fading.

In the first place, every stanza in the poem reveals a different aspect of autumn: the one dominated by plentifulness, the other by labor, and the last one by meditative silence. Through sensual and musical language, which is exemplified by such images as “mists and mellow fruitfulness” and “barred clouds bloom the soft, dying day, ” Keats discovers in the gradual extinction of the season the very same ebb and flow of life that humans go through.

In its last instance, “To Autumn” does not forget to enunciate that beauty is to be found not only in the birth of things but also in their death, i.e., the tranquil and gracious farewell of the things that have reached their perfection.

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