Ode to the Evening by William Collins: Summary and Study

Ode to the Evening is one of Collins' most beautiful songs in his book "Odes on Several Descriptive and Allegorical Subjects" It consists of 52 rows with a non-rhythmic structure. This beautiful song refers to the goddess, the fairy of the evening. The anthropomorphic poet says the evening is clean, intelligent, and humble, unlike the characteristic bright sun.
This verse has three parts. The first is worship in open spaces in the evening, the second is to sow guidance in the pursuit of peace, and the third is the idea of going back everywhere.
When the song begins, the speaker humbly seeks to give the spirit of the Evening the experience of singing to please her. It is a natural beauty but is sometimes found hot. She also loves the songs of the speakers. The pleasant nymphs of the evening derived from the flowers bring perfume to the quiet atmosphere of the Evening. To calm the atmosphere, the speaker's music should be very soft, like the sound of a stream. The only sounds the speaker could hear were the barking of bats and creatures. He wanted to go to a broken building in a lonely valley and see a beautiful evening, but the rain and wind bothered him. So he decided to visit the hills to watch the evening fall.
In closing, the speakers agreed that the evening celebration will continue to bring peace and harmony, foster friendship, music, science, and peace activists.
The nocturnal description and the feminine application of it is one of Collins' strengths. Words and phrases such as Chaste Eve, Fantasy, Pink Lips, Preserved Nymph, and Glory-Workers are examples of the use of women in poetry. This nocturnal punch adds intelligence, patience, and beauty to a woman. The poet uses the Evening to show the women as controversial, admirable, and generous. The evening is a melting pot of the sun, and sunset is basically the transition from day to evening from light to dark. The singer said it represented the worst evening, figuratively encompassing all aspects of the day, good or bad. In this darkness, everything is equal and wonderful. It was an evening to make sure the next day was bright and sunny.
In a sense, the evening is the seed of hope and life for tomorrow. Anthropomorphic Collins refers in his poem the Evening as "moral purity," in the Bible. The comparison between biblical Evening and evening is uncertain. But if the poet links evening to Eve's innocence and purity, evening means a good time during the day, when everything leads to a collapse of peace and harmony. The singer's intention is still ambiguous.
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