To a Skylark

Percy Bysshe Shelly was born in Sussex in 1792 with scoliosis. He was sent to prestigious schools, first Eton and later Oxford, but he never could settle into the role of a student. Shelly was expelled because of a pamphlet he wrote entitled The Necessity of Atheism. This led to trouble between him and his father, so instead of going home, Shelly went to London. Shelly spent the last few years of his life in Pisa, Italy, where he became great friends with Lord Byron, which had a great impact on his work. His best poetry, including "Ode to the West Wind" and Prometheus Unbound, was written during this time. Shelly tragically died in a boating accident at age 30, in 1822.

In "To a Skylark", Shelly uses many literary devices, excellent imagery, and emotion-filled phrases, making it one of the greatest works of all time. In the first stanza, Shelly compares the skylark to an angel, writing, "Hail to thee, blithe spirit! Bird thou never wert, that from heaven, or near it..." In the next stanza, he compares the skylark to a "cloud of fire" in "the deep blue thou wingest..." In the last line of this stanza, Shelly uses consonance to make a concise statement. Shelly writes, "And singing still dost soar, and soaring ever singest." which means that the skylark's beautiful singing soars, and the skylark sings ever while he soars. The next two stanzas show Shelly's excellent ability to use imagery and metaphors in his writing. He sets the scene for the skylark's flight. Shelly writes, "In the golden lighting of the sunken sun, o'er which clouds are brightening, thou dost float and run; like an unbodied joy whose races is just begun. The pale purple even melts around thy flight; like a star of heaven in the broad daylight thou art unseen, but yet I hear thy shrill delight." Shelly compares their "shrill delight" to the rays of a star in the next stanza. Shelly says, "Keen as are the arrows of that silver sphere, whose intense lamp narrows in the white dawn clear, until we hardly see - we feel that it is there." In the sixth stanza, Shelly compares the skylark to the moon that lights up a bare night. He says, "All the earth and air with thy voice is loud, as, when night is bare, from one lonely cloud, the moon rains out her beams, and Heaven is overflowed." These opening stanzas are Shelly's explanation of what he is seeing, and he uses imagery and metaphors to make the reader feel and see what he his experiencing.

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In the next stanzas, Shelly uses parallelism, imagery, metaphors, and great writing to try to compare the skylark to other beautiful scenes or people on earth. Shelly begins by saying,"What thou art we know not; what is most like thee? From rainbow clouds there flow not drops so bright to see, as from thy presence showers a rain of melody." This stanza sets the stage for Shelly's comparison of the skylark to beautiful creations on the earth. Shelly's use of parallelism ("Like a poet hidden...Like a highborn maiden...Like a glowworm golden...") shines through these stanzas. First, he compares the ...

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