How does the west wind act both as a destroyer and preserver up board english?
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
Shelley calls the West Wind a destroyer because it strips all the leaves off the trees, tumbles them helter-skelter and piles them up all over the landscape. ... The new seeds are an essential part of the debris the wind is blowing, and the dead leaves are essential to the germination of living trees, plants and flowers.
Answered by
0
The west wind acts both as a destroyer and preserver up board English acted as a destroyer and preserver.
- It presence of the West Wind is both a creative when it marks the beginning and a destructive force when it sweeps all that is dead.
- This is also remarkable for its revolutionary element which is in a way of signals to the end of decaying monarchies.
- The winder season cannot last long even after there comes always a spring that ends on a strong note of optimism.
Similar questions