John Keats, Updated EditionRomantic 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 |
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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 |
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Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic allegorical Apollo ballad beauty belle dame Blackwood’s Book Cockney School consciousness critics Dame sans Merci death defined diction dream early draft ekphrasis Elgin Marbles Endymion essay Eve of St eyes faery Fall of Hyperion Fall’’s Fancy Fanny Brawne fetish figurative figures final find first flowers gaze Grecian Urn happy honey human Hunt’s Hyperion’’s identified imagination implied Indicator version Indolence influence John Keats Keats’s poem Keatsian Lamia language Leigh Hunt letter lines literary look Madeline Madeline’s meaning Melancholy Milton Moneta myth narrative narrator natural Nightingale object Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche one’s Petrarchan Petrarchan sonnet phrase poem’s poet poet’s poetic figures political Porphyro Press readers reflect rhyme Romantic sense sestet sexual Shakespearean Shelley’s significance song sonnet speaker specific Spenser Spenserian St Agnes stanza twenty-four Stillinger sublime suggests symbol truth urn’s vision visual voice words Wordsworth writing