John KeatsOxford University Press, 1994 - 260 páginas This is an entirely new selection of Keat's finest poetry containing all his best known work as well as a sample of less familiar pieces. Keats published three volumes of poetry before his death at age twenty-five of tuberculosis and, while many of his contemporaries were prompt to recognize his greatness, snobbery and political hostility led the Tory press to vilify and patronize him as a "Cockney poet." Financial anxieties and the loss of those he loved most had tried him persistently, yet he dismissed the concept of life as a vale of tears and substituted the concept of a "vale of Soul-making." His poetry and his remarkable letters reveal a spirit of questing vitality and profound understanding and his final volume, which contains the great odes and the unfinished Hyperion, attests to an astonishing maturity of power. |
Contenido
Imitation of Spenser I | 1 |
O grant that like to Peter I | 7 |
Endymion Books I III 11 1102 and 11 142280 IV 11 1290 36 | 11 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Apollo beauty breast breath bright Charles Cowden Clarke clouds Composed dark death delight divine doth dream earth Elgin Marbles Endymion eyes face fair Fall of Hyperion Fanny Brawne feel flowers forest gentle Goddess golden grass green hair hand happy hath heart heaven hither hour Hyperion John Keats Jupiter Keats kiss Lamia leaves Leigh Hunt light lips look look'd Lycius melody Mnemosyne moan moon morning mortal Muses never night nymph o'er pain pale pass'd pleasant poem Poesy Poet poetry published during Keats's rhyme rose round Saturn seem'd shade sigh silent silver sing sleep Sleep and Poetry smile soft song sorrow soul spake spirit stars stood sweet sweet dove died tears tell Tellus thee thine things thou art thought Titans touch'd trees voice warm weep whisper wide wild wind wings young ΙΟ