William Wordsworth's "I am lonely like a cloud", Percy Shelley's "Sky Skylark", and Gerald Hopkins's "high performance as a kingfisher" are characterized by natural beauty and shape. Use of natural forces and metaphor in descriptive sentences. They express the greatness of nature and use sublimation to explain the specific purpose of nature. Writers also use sublimation as a way to communicate their imagination and interpretation of nature to readers.
The sublimation of literature, as well as philosophy and aesthetic sublimation are inherently associated with nature, but sublimation evolves along with literature as well as most literary terms. More writers began to associate the sublime of nature with inner fear. The author begins to see sublimation, and its inherent contradiction (pain and happiness, fear and reverence) represents a change in the political and cultural atmosphere of the times. They began to incorporate more aspects of sublimation into their literary works as a way to externalize their inner conflict. Thus, Sublime is particularly attractive for Romantics.
When Wordsworth expressed something as "sublime", he combined several definitions of this term. In Peri-Hypsus or sublime, which is a literary critique of Greek author Pseud-Longinus (1st century BC), sublime refers to aristocracy or sublimation in "excellence" in language and human spirit. In a philosophical investigation into the origin of our noble and beautiful idea (1757), influential critics and politician Edmund Burke said sublimation is "to inspire painful and dangerous thoughts I believe it is something suitable "It would be to work in a way that resembles terror, whatever type of fear, or familiarity with terrible things (Wolmesley, p. 86). Those things and events are intimidating, but they are still the source of "happiness". Burke also uses sublime, abstract or ambiguous ideas, such as infinity, breadth, and sanctity.
Edmund Burke defines literary terms and sublimates the concept of "surprise". The surprise of thinking about Burke's very high idea is that at this point you are included in the beauty and meaning of the object up to the point of your own interpretation. Burke expressed his knowledge of painful experiences of suffering and hid it in beautiful light. Luxurious ideas are best found in John Keats' s "Nightingale". In the poetry of 'Night', Keats realized that his death was inevitable, and he accepted this fact. Although it is not more creepy than the thought of death, Keats found comfort and excitement in the idea of right death at night, "painfully stopped at midnight." Nightingale is beautiful. That song is known for melodic songs. It seems that he never awakens, his soul is released, imagining himself in a sleeping state without knowing the pain nor the pain