The Odes of John KeatsBelknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1983 - 330 pages Argues that Keat's six odes form a sequence, identifies their major themes, and provides detailed interpretations of the poems' philosophy, mythological references, and lyric structures. |
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Page 13
... Autumn cannot be seen clearly ) , I wish to reflect on their human meaning and what they can tell us about Keats's view of our human predicament and his own predicament as an artist . The complexity of Keats's reflective and ...
... Autumn cannot be seen clearly ) , I wish to reflect on their human meaning and what they can tell us about Keats's view of our human predicament and his own predicament as an artist . The complexity of Keats's reflective and ...
Page 14
... Autumn “ said " things by means of what I then thought of as collocation- what Keats called ( when he praised it in Milton ) " stationing . " Somewhat later I came to see that the autumn ode " said " things also by the activities of its ...
... Autumn “ said " things by means of what I then thought of as collocation- what Keats called ( when he praised it in Milton ) " stationing . " Somewhat later I came to see that the autumn ode " said " things also by the activities of its ...
Page 243
... Autumn - who is not , as in Spenser , a masculine figure , but rather a corn - goddess derived from pagan myth but filled with Spenserian reminiscence . Spenser's masculine Autumn appears As though he joyed in his plentious store ...
... Autumn - who is not , as in Spenser , a masculine figure , but rather a corn - goddess derived from pagan myth but filled with Spenserian reminiscence . Spenser's masculine Autumn appears As though he joyed in his plentious store ...
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Common terms and phrases
adieu aesthetic allegorical Ambition Apollo autumn ode Beauty bird bower brain casement cloud conceptual Cupid and Psyche death diction divinity dream drowsy earth Endymion erotic eternal eyes fade Fall of Hyperion Fancy Fanny Brawne feeling figures flowers frieze fruit gnats goddess happy harvest human imagination immortal Indolence intellectual John Keats Keats Keats's Keatsian landscape language last stanza Letters listening medium Melan melody Milton mimetic mind Moneta Moneta's face Mutability mythological natural Nightingale numbers Ode on Indolence Ode on Melancholy ode To Autumn Ode to Psyche pain Paradise Lost passage pastoral philosophical poem Poesy poet poetry propositional Proserpine Psyche's question realm represented rhythm sacrifice scene season second stanza sensation sense sensual Shakespeare shape shrine sing song sonnet sorrow soul speak Spenserian spirit sweet symbol thee thou thought tion transubstantiation trope truth vision visual voice wine wings wish