John Keats, Updated EditionHarold Bloom Infobase Publishing, 2009 Romantic poet John Keats was only 25 when he died of tuberculosis, but his work has achieved canonical status. Poet and critic Matthew Arnold said of Keats, "In the faculty of naturalistic interpretation, in what we call natural magic, he ranks with Shake |
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
The Ode to Psyche | 13 |
Nightingale and Melancholy | 37 |
Keatss La Belle Dame sans Merci | 67 |
Hyperion and The Fall of Hyperion | 97 |
The Eve of St Agnes | 129 |
Keats and the Urn | 149 |
Poems Endymion and the Poetics of Dissent | 185 |
Perfecting the Sonnet | 227 |
Afterthought | 249 |
Chronology | 251 |
Contributors | 253 |
255 | |
Acknowledgments | 259 |
261 | |
The story of Keats | 211 |
Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic Agnes allegorical appears beauty becomes beginning belle dame Book called Cockney concerns consciousness critics death described desire dream earlier early effect ekphrasis English epigram essay example experience expression eyes fact Fall Fancy figures find first Grecian happy honey hope human Hunt Hyperion imagination implied important Indicator John Keats Keats’s kind language later leaves less letter lines literary living look Madeline meaning Melancholy Milton mind narrative natural never Nightingale object observer offers opening original perhaps phrase poem poet poet’s poetic poetry political possible present Press Psyche published question readers reference relation represents rhyme Romantic seems seen sense sexual song sonnet speaker stanza suggests symbol thing thought tradition truth turn University vision visual voice writing