John Keats 's "Night" and Matthew Arnold' s "Dover Beach" were written by different people at different times, but their conclusion about human condition is very similar. As the second generation romantic, Keats' language is rich and expressive, focusing on individual poets; and Victorian era of Arnold, era and attitude, written in simple language, and wider Focus on the context. It is the world. Keats is a young man, but he dies with knowledge soon; Arnold is a newlywed man, everyone thinks it is healthy and has a very long life.
Keats 'Keats Yangko and Nightingale' s John Keats combined with the two immortal things "Greeks of Greeks" and "Night" trying to escape the harshness of human life. In "Nightingale", Keats tried to connect with the chirping of birds as the music did not know anything about aging and death. Keats has the same motivation in "the age to ancient Greeks" and tried to connect three separate images of the mysterious cymbal. Connection ... The analysis of "Westerly Winds" by Westerly Windsley originally looked more complicated than it actually was. The structure of poetry is like a long and complicated sentence, because the main sentence does not appear to the end. The point of the 54 poem was interrupted for 56 lines and then the reader saw clearly what Shelley said to the west wind and why he said so. In the first four quarters, Shelley described the westerly wind in three different ways.
In Keat's "The Nightingale" and Shelley's "Westerly Wind", both poets showed a lot of inspiration in their poems. The Nightingale bird represents the supernatural phenomenon the speaker envisioned. The wind of "Westerly Winds" is inspired by the speaker and functions as "destroyer and defense". In poetry, in the "nightingale" the reader sees the poet making inspiration through poet drunken Tuga and some kind of opium. The poet talked about dying in the consumption of toxic drinks in the second quarter. The speaker wants "I will fade away, disappear, completely forgotten / You do not know in leaves never (21-22)". The speaker quotes life and all the bad aspects of the world that inspired him to think about suicide. This idea of death and suicide is further explained by reference to Section VI.
30-33: Make a loud noise on the beach where the waves on the beach are covered with cobblestones. These lines are reminiscent of Arnold's "Dover Beach", and the last two lines reflect the emotions similar to those expressed by the nightingale. Human music has been heard on many coasts of foreigners from the turn of the century. This idea was fully developed in the next section (1.34-44).