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Ode to the West Wind
by
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Home
Poetry
Ode to the West Wind
Literary Devices
Symbols, Imagery, Wordplay
Intro
The Poem
Summary
Analysis
Themes
Quotes
Study Questions
Best of the Web
How to Read a Poem
Symbolism, Imagery, Wordplay
The West Wind
Dead Leaves
Funerals
The Æolian Harp
Bodies of Water
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Table of Contents
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Ode to the West Wind Symbolism, Imagery & Wordplay
There’s more to a poem than meets the eye.
The West Wind
The West Wind is the object of the speaker’s plea in this poem, the powerful force that could deliver him from his inability to make himself heard or to communicate his ideas to others. Blowi...
Dead Leaves
Dead leaves are referenced no less than five times in this short lyric poem. Dead leaves are the remnants of the previous season which the wind clears away; they’re also a metaphorical representa...
Funerals
Although there aren’t any literal funerals in "Ode to the West Wind," there’s plenty of funereal imagery and symbolism. We’ve got dirges, corpses, the "dying year," a sepulcher, a...
The Æolian Harp
The æolian harp was a common parlor instrument in the nineteenth century. Sort of like a wind chime, the æolian harp (or "æolian lyre" or "wind harp") was meant to be left in a windy...
Bodies of Water
Although "Ode to the West Wind" is mostly about, well, the wind, the middle of the poem moves away from the airy breezes and considers a different element: water. This slippage starts to happen in...