"Society embodied forces opposed to individual development. Indeed, the word society had come to embody the impulses that desecrated nature and oppressed the poor in the interests of industry and progress" (Hugo-Spacks, 663)
Personal Influence In the poem, the primary reality remains the physical, emotional, and sonic abundance due to the emphasis on the awareness of the present time, which is kept secure by the kinesthesis and the imagery of touch. This matches the preferences stated by Keats for experience against philosophical thoughts-"O for a sensational life instead of a life of Thoughts," here, instant palpable sensation results in an experience of peace and fullness, which strongly resists winter and death thoughts, which inevitably comes with time (De Almeida, 1991)
The Author's Biography Keats died young, at the age of 25, and his entire writing career did not last longer than three and a half years, from the early gushy effusions in the volume he first published, Poems (1819), throughout the late Ode to Autumn. However, he produced a series of mature write-ups both in lyrics and narrative forms enough to establish him as a consummate writer of distinction (Fermanis, 2009)
However, it is worth mentioning that the Autumn Ode makes a significantly different application of language from that in other of such great odes; because its end is achieved, not through final reconciliation, in the body of the poem, of elements without harmony, but through the acceptance of the poet, within the poet's consciousness, of those elements before composition. This calm, absolute acceptance of reality, which gives a true picture of the real situation and beauty of things as they really are, is probably the major difference between the Autumn Ode and all the others in the 1820 volume (Lovell, 1950)
Giles's Hills-Cornfields in the year 1819, and the site of a popular fair really offers direct insight for the sounds and sights of the popular ode. This new countryside helps us to see dimensions we have so far not suspected in Keat's involvement in modern politics, especially in relation to the management of food manufacturing and supplies, productivity and wages (Roe, 1998)