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العودة   منتديات سكاو > الكليات الجامعية > منتدى كلية الآداب والعلوم الإنسانية > قسم اللغات الأوروبية و آدابها
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ً_ً تجمع طالبات البويتري مع د ناريمان ^_^

قسم اللغات الأوروبية و آدابها

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أدوات الموضوع إبحث في الموضوع انواع عرض الموضوع
منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز منتديات طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك عبد العزيز
  #1  
قديم 02-11-2009, 10:20 PM

EEEEE EEEEE غير متواجد حالياً

جامعي

 
تاريخ التسجيل: Oct 2008
التخصص: English
نوع الدراسة: إنتظام
المستوى: متخرج
الجنس: أنثى
المشاركات: 149
افتراضي رد: ً_ً تجمع طالبات البويتري مع د ناريمان ^_^


السلام عليكم هذا شرح اود تو اوتوم جمعته من البنات ومرة حلوووو

ode to autumn

In stanza 1, the season of Autumn is seen as conspiring with the sun to ripen the fruits to their maturation so that they are ready for harvesting. The vine-creepers are presented in terms of an image of arrested motion, running along the edges of a thatched roof. The apple trees around the cottages, covered with the softness of mossy growth, are bent low because of the burden of fruits. The Autumn being a season of '.......mellow fruitfulness', it aims to fill all fruits with 'ripeness to the core'. The gourd grows to full swelling and the hazel nuts is impregnated with a 'sweet kernel'. As the season seems to continue the process of maturation unendingly, new flowers keep blossoming, and the bees, as it were in a state of trance, go on collecting honey, thus overflowing the cells of their hives.

In stanza 2, he starts asking a rhetoric question to autumn which now is not only a woman but a harvester. However, this woman is apparently resting in a granary or in the landscape. Some work remains; the furrow is "half-reap'd," the winnowed hair refers to ripe grain still standing while she is sleeping on the smell of poppies also as she is not working with her hook, some flowers, that were going to be cut, remain uncountable. In line 19, the poet addresses Autumn as a gleaner who takes what's the brook lades. In addition, it is like a cyder-presser patiently watching the 'last oozings' of cider hours by hours.






The third stanza continues again with rhetoric questions. In the first one Keats asks the woman where the sounds of the spring are. And the second one is just a repetition of the same question. However, the poet tells autumn that she has her own sounds, although some of them are sad:‘Then in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn’ On the contrary, the ‘full-grown lambs’ bleat loudly, the crickets sing, a red-breast whistles, and swallows warble in the sky. Keats also describes a day that is dying, ending, and, as a consequence, is getting rose (lines 25 and 26). The last lines of this stanza consist of a combination of the autumn sounds, of the animal sounds (lines from 30 to 33) as I said before few lines above.To conclude, although my first impression was that John Keats was simply describing the main characteristics of autumn, and the human and animal activities related to it, a deeper reading could suggest that Keats talks about the process of life. Autumn symbolises maturity in human and animal lives. Some instances of this are the ‘full-grown lambs’, the sorrow of the gnats, the wind that lives and dies, and the day that is dying and getting dark. As all we know, the next season is winter, a part of the year that represents aging and death, in other words, the end of life. However, in my opinion, death does not have a negative connotation because Keats enjoys and accepts ‘autumn’ or maturity as part of life, though winter is coming.
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