Keats the PoetPrinceton University Press, 2 jan 1994 - 354 pagina's Keats the Poet was first published in 1973, just as the crest of all the New-Critical exegeses had passed, leaving the critical literature with a wealth of fine readings, but without a real organizing program within which to view them. Stuart Sperry established such a frame of reference. Further, he did so with such prescience that even the most radical deconstructive or new historical approaches to Keats today must bear witness to their inception in Sperry's emphasis on, and subtle demonstration of, the centrality of "indeterminacy' in the poet. Now available in paperback for the first time, this work will enlighten a new generation of readers. |
Inhoudsopgave
ONE A Poetry of Sensation 3 | 30 |
THREE The Early Verse | 72 |
FOUR The Allegory of Endymion | 90 |
SEVEN The First Hyperion | 155 |
The | 198 |
NINE From The Eve of Saint Mark to La Belle | 221 |
The Great Odes | 242 |
Lamia | 292 |
The Fall of Hyperion | 310 |
EPILOGUE To Autumn | 336 |
Afterword 1994 | 343 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract achieve actually Agnes appear aspects attempt awareness beauty become beginning Book closely complex conception concern consciousness context continually course creative critics define described discussion dream earlier early effect elements Endymion existence experience expression eyes fact Fall feeling final further hope human Hyperion idea ideal identity images imagination important intensity interpretation John Keats Keats's kind knowledge larger later letter light limits lines major material means merely metaphor mind mystery nature necessary never Nevertheless objects opening particular partly passage perception poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible problem progress questions reading reality realization reason remains represents reveals Romantic seems sensation sense significance sonnet spirit sublime suggests thing thought throughout tion truth understanding various verse vision vital whole Wordsworth writes written wrote