In what respects is the ‘Ode to the West Wind’ a representative poem of Shelley ?
Ans. The poem, Ode to the West Wind represents some important characteristics of Shelley’s poetry. The west wind is the symbol of revolution with its destructive aspects and creative principle. He implores the west wind to inspire him with its tameless spirit of that he can destroy the old and the worn-out and-create a new world based on equality, fraternity and liberty. Shelley’s revolutionary idealism is best illustrated in the poem. The poem sounds two important notes of Shelley’s poetry—his personal despondency and his prophetic vision. He “falls upon the thorns of life, he bleeds.” He prays to the west wind to lift him as a leaf, a cloud and a wave. But his faltering accents become trumpet tones when he utters the woes of man instead of his own sorrows. The tired child becomes a prophet and sings a mighty song to quicken the sleeping world to a new birth—“O wind ! if Winter comes, can Spring be far behind.” Shelley is most vitally with romantic idealism. He gives hims...