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 130
... give birth to the generalizing phrase " silent form , " and the " marble " men give birth to the phrase " Cold Pastoral ! " ( When we last saw the word " pastoral " it was natural and vegetative in the " pastoral eglantine " of ...
... give birth to the generalizing phrase " silent form , " and the " marble " men give birth to the phrase " Cold Pastoral ! " ( When we last saw the word " pastoral " it was natural and vegetative in the " pastoral eglantine " of ...
Page 225
... give so dread a stress To her cold lips , and fill with such a light Her planetary eyes ; and touch her voice With such a sorrow . Intrusions of the present tense such as those referring to the immor- tal sickness and the mild moon in ...
... give so dread a stress To her cold lips , and fill with such a light Her planetary eyes ; and touch her voice With such a sorrow . Intrusions of the present tense such as those referring to the immor- tal sickness and the mild moon in ...
Page 278
... give . We scarcely notice that one sense has been touched into responsiveness and then allowed to relax as another is brought into play . The severe and controlled ex- aminations of one sense at a time in the preceding odes have borne ...
... give . We scarcely notice that one sense has been touched into responsiveness and then allowed to relax as another is brought into play . The severe and controlled ex- aminations of one sense at a time in the preceding odes have borne ...
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Common terms and phrases
active aesthetic allegorical allowed Apollo appear attempt Autumn Beauty becomes beginning bird bower brain called close cloud comes course death divinity dream earlier earth Endymion existence experience eyes face fact fade Fall Fancy feeling figures final flowers follow fruit give gnats goddess grape hand happy harvest hope human Hyperion imagination Indolence intensity Keats Keats's language later leaves Letters light listening means Melancholy Milton mind Moneta's mythological natural never Nightingale object offered once opening origins pain passage philosophical pleasure poem Poesy poet poetry present propositional Psyche question realm relation remains represented scene season seems seen sensation sense sensual shape song sorrow soul speak spirit stanza symbol things thou thought tion true truth turn vision visual voice wings wish writing