The wind as creative inspiration
Ode to the West wind is a meditation and reflection. It is also a celebration of the wind as a source of creative imagination. It is formed as a sustained apostrophe, where the poet addresses the west wind through three domains - the earth/land (stanza 1), the sky (stanza 2) and the ocean (stanza 3). Stanza 4 echoes the three preceeding stanzas, and here he introduces the "I" and starts to relating everything to himself. In line 55-56 he explains why: he feels that he has lost his abilities as a poet and he asks the wind for inspiration. Line 57 is particularly important. Here, he asks the wind to "make me thy lyre", and he sees himself played on by the wind. This clearly suggests the wind as creative inspiration, and he wants to absorb the force of the wind. He also wants the wind to spread his poetry, which becomes evident in lines 63-64. Anyway, that's my take on the poem..;)