"To Autumn" is one of the most sensuous, image-laden poems of Keats. It is a magnificent depiction of the fall season with a 3-stanza form, eleven lines each, and an ABAB rhyme pattern.
The first stanza deals primarily with the autumn mood, while the other autumn concerns the manner of the goddess, with the homemaker's trace of her, and the third stanza goes back to the autumn's beauty and recommends her not to grieve the spring's loss since there is a wonderful life in the autumn.
Throughout this poem, the speaker talks to a person in fall. In the first verse, he saw that the fall, as well as the sun, are like the closest companions who plan how to produce fruit before harvests. The maturation leads to the drop of seeds, which sets the stage for the spring blooms and restarts the entire process. He tells us the bees who believe that summer may continue forever as they bubble around the blooms. However, the speaker knows better.
The second stanza depicts the time following harvest when the autumn is just hanging around the granary where grains are gathered. Much of the hard work has been done and in the fall you can only have a snack in the fields, stroll over brooks or observe cider production.
The third stanza says that spring music is a faded dream, but fall music is also very wonderful. It consisted of pictures of the wolves and harvested sunset fields, gnats buzzing over the river, bleeding lambs, singing crickets, and twittering and birds. All sights and smells create a true symphony of pleasure.
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