Shelly is very similar to Wordsworth of "Westerly Wind" of "Immortal Hint" and uses nature to express the life and death of the human spirit. As they all describe nature, these two poets use the same comparison of how the earth and its life compare with our own human life. Sherry thinks that he will use the season as a way to describe human life during the cycle. Wordsworth seems to focus more on the stage people experience in their lives.
Naturally, the concept of treatment probably was not a beginner to Sherry, but may have read Coleridge, Wordsworth, and of course her husband Percy. The equipment used by Wordsworth is very similar to that of Mary Shelley and is several miles above Tintern Abbey and uses a language that may influence her. In Tintern Abbey, nature is also used as a repairman for a spokesperson of poetry. She may be influenced by the natural theme of Tintern Abbey as a modification, or she may be affected by other romantic poems she read, because nature itself is a subject of a romantic era is. This may also be a simple parallel process she found on her own, but perhaps she is under some external influence.
Like many romantic poets, especially William Wordsworth, Sherry showed great respect for nature's beauty, and I felt he was closely related to the power of nature. In his early verse, Shelley shared a romantic interest in panthesism by believing in a sacred and unified spirit that is penetrating the gods or everything in the universe. In many poems he refers to this unity of power and expresses it as "the spirit of beauty" of "praise the beauty of wisdom", and identifies it in Mont Blanc and Mont Blanc in the Alf River . This power is all causes. Happiness of men, faith, kindness, and happiness are the inspiration of poetry and the source of sacred truth. Sherry has repeatedly argued that this power can influence people to improve the world. But Sherry also realized that the power of nature is not entirely positive. Nature destroys it as often as it stimulates or creates it, it brutally destroys it.