"Teach me half the gladness/ That thy brain must know/ Such harmonious madness/ From my lips would flow/ The world should listen then, as I am listening now." (l. 101 - 105) . Addressee: o the speaker in the very first line of the poem cheers to the skylark, addressing him as the "blithe spirit" (l. 1), whose song comes "from heaven or near it" (l. 3) ==> bird is more than just a skylark, it is put close to the divine and supernatural right from the beginning of the poemo mystified by describing him as "sprite" (l. 61), ==> the bird becomes a supernatural being. Time: varying ==> evening "In the golden light'ning/ Of the sunken sun" (l. 11 - 12), from that on only settings in comparisons, like dawn (l. 20 - 25), night (l. 26 - 30) . Setting: nature..." />