To Autumn

    Cards (12)

    • The poem 'To Autumn' was written by John Keats
      1819
    • The poem 'To Autumn'
      • Explores many ideas about nature
      • Personifies the season of autumn as an actual person with feelings, who can speak and is a physical being
    • Keats personifies autumn
      It is easier for the audience to understand how he personally feels about it
    • Autumn is personified as
      An intelligent and wise being that is 'conspiring'
    • The poem 'To Autumn'
      • Portrays autumn as a female goddess
      • The reader becomes the second person and Keats is talking directly to autumn
    • Evidence of autumn as a female goddess
      • 'Thy hair soft lifted'
      • Keats speaks kindly of her
    • The poem 'To Autumn'
      • Suggests autumn is not just something we can see, but also something we can feel
      • Uses a lot of auditory imagery and a lexical field of words related to nature and animals
    • 'To Autumn'
      Can be described as John Keats' personal declaration of love in the form of a love letter to the season
    • 'To Autumn'
      • Is very structured and formal, with 3 stanzas of 11 lines each and a rhyme scheme of A, B, A, B
      • Depicts a historic, romanticised view of autumn when people were more in touch with nature
    • The use of sibilance and caesura
      Creates a soft, mellow mood and atmosphere for the poem
    • The use of question marks

      Leaves time for the reader to pause and think about what Keats is asking 'Autumn'
    • Keats refers to the season of autumn as a female goddess that takes on different roles such as a farmer and a singer, personifying autumn with different characteristics and traits</b>