In poetry, a "fitful gust" in the context of autumn could refer to sporadic or irregular bursts of wind that are unpredictable and inconsistent. The use of the word "fitful" suggests a sense of restlessness or unease in the atmosphere, mirroring the changing and transitional nature of the season of autumn. This imagery may evoke feelings of instability, impermanence, or even a sense of foreboding in the poem.
By rendering fitful as fitfull he refreshes a literary adjective: the wind is made more alive, somehow, by being fitfull – full of fits and starts.
abab
Fitful - 2011 was released on: USA: 2011
i had a fitful sleep, i woke up so many times
Autumn joins the maturing sun to load grapes on the vines, and ripen apples and other fruit. It is a poem describing the season Autumn.
There are many Odes to Autumn in English Literature, but the most famous one was written by John Keats.
Keats uses personification, addressing Autumn and describing it as a woman.
Helen Keller's poem "Autumn" was written in 1890 when she was just 10 years old. It captures her observations and experiences of the season.
The poet John Keats wrote the poem "To Autumn" in 1819. It is considered one of his most famous works and is celebrated for its vivid imagery and appreciation of nature.
The poem "Autumn Within" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow uses a simple and common stanza form called quatrains - four-line stanzas.
The poem is a poem in praise of Autumn (Fall in the US). The first verse describes the virtues of Autumn in terms of harvest. The second verse personifies Autumn as though she were a goddess. In the third verse he compares Autumn favourably to Spring, the favourite season of poets. Keats himself is obviously in a more relaxed frame of mind, not dwelling on his imminent death (from TB) but appreciating the many benefits of middle age before the winter of death.
You could mention autumn