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  1. Wind Lyrics. This house has been far out at sea all night, The woods crashing through darkness, the booming hills, Winds stampeding the fields under the window. Floundering black astride and...

  2. The British poet Ted Hughes published "Wind" in his 1957 collection The Hawk in the Rain. The poem's speaker is both terrified of and mesmerized by a wild, destructive wind, which ravages the landscape and threatens to rip the speaker's house from its foundation.

  3. Analysis (ai): This poem captures the overwhelming force of nature through vivid imagery and a relentless rhythm, creating a sense of awe and unease. The wind is both destructive and exhilarating, transforming the landscape and shaking the foundations of the house.

    • Summary
    • Themes
    • Structure and Form
    • Literary Devices
    • Analysis ofWind
    • About Ted Hughes
    • Similar Poetry

    ‘Wind’ is both within and out of Hughes’ normal writing style. Most of his most formidable works of poetry take place within such suspended periods but personify the moment using animals. In ‘Wind’ there is nothing even vaguely humanistic present throughout the poem, thus lending to it an air of almost complete animosity and luck. The people at the...

    In ‘Wind,’ Hughes engages with themes of nature, human experience, and relationships. By the end of the poem, the wind that started as an incredible, although terrifying, natural force transforms into a possible metaphorfor the state of a couple’s relationship. It is quite easy to connect the couple in this piece to Hughes and Plath, but as there i...

    ‘Wind’ by Ted Hughes is a six-stanza poem that is separated into sets of four lines, known as quatrains. These quatrains do not follow a specific rhyme scheme or metrical pattern, meaning that the poem is written in free verse. Despite this, there are some examples of half-rhyme and full rhyme in the text. For instance, “note” and “though” in stanz...

    Hughes makes use of several literary devices in ‘Wind.’ These include but are not limited to onomatopoeia, alliteration, and enjambment. The latter, enjambment, can be seen throughout the poem. In fact, it is in all the stanzas except for the last. Some of the best examples are the transitions between lines one and two of stanza three and line four...

    Stanza One

    With the opening of this poem, the speakerpaints a perfect picture of complete desolation. A house is stranded out at sea. One can only conclude that a tragic storm strong enough to lift a house from its foundation is responsible for this stranded house. The speaker describes that it has been out at sea all night. This reveals that the storm has been going on for quite some time, and there has been no one to recover the house or to rescue those inside. The storm continues in a furry as “the w...

    Stanza Two

    The night is finally over, but daybreak does not restore peace. Instead, the sky is orange, and “the hills had new places.” This storm has changed everything. Even the hills about his house look different. His home itself seems to be in a different place. The speaker suddenly feels that nature itself is his enemy, that light is a “blade” like a sword to fight him with. Nature is also “luminous black and emerald.” These are dark and mysterious colors, revealing that the speaker views nature as...

    Stanza Three

    It is now noon, and the speaker describes himself as inching his way along the side of the house until he gets to the door. He dares to look up, just once, and the “brunt wind” was so strong that it actually “dented the balls of [his] eyes.” This description allows the reader to understand the true magnitude of the storm and the strength of the wind. He looks out to the hills and sees that the wind continues to drum the hills and strain the “guyropes,” which were intended to keep the tents fa...

    While this poem effectively describes the way any human being might feel in the face of the power of nature, it is likely that this poem describes something much more personal to Ted Hughes. Hughes was married, for four years, to Sylvia Plath. Plath, a poet herself, is best known for being a tortured soul. Her poetry is dark and sometimes downright...

    Readers who enjoyed ‘Wind’ should also consider reading some of Hughes’ other best-known poems. For example, ‘Amulet,‘ ‘Crow’s Fall,‘ and ‘Bayonet Charge.‘ The latter depicts raw human emotions of fear and attributes of strength and focuses on a soldier from the First World War. ‘Amulet’ is a simple poem that uses Hughes’ much-loved animal imagery....

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  4. ‘Wind’ is, after ‘The Thought-Fox’, probably the most famous and most successful poem in Ted Hughes’ debut collection of poetry, The Hawk in the Rain (1957). In the poem, Hughes describes the experience of a powerful gale which blasts through the landscape, affecting everything from the birds flying through the air to the very ...

  5. 25 de oct. de 2023 · 'Wind' is a poem full of imagery, forceful language and movement. It is a typical Ted Hughes poem in that it explores the idea of struggle with and within nature, the first-person speaker directly connecting the reader with the monstrous power of the wind.

  6. Wind. This house has been far out at sea all night, The woods crashing through darkness, the booming hills, Winds stampeding the fields under the window. Floundering black astride and blinding wet. Till day rose; then under an orange sky. The hills had new places, and wind wielded. Blade—light, luminous black and emerald,