Seamus Heaney was a Roman Catholic poet born in Northern Ireland in 1939. He published his first book of poems in 1966 and went on to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995. Many of his poems explore his cultural identity and relationship to Ireland during times of conflict and political turmoil. His poem "Punishment" was inspired by the discovery of a bog body in Ireland and references ritualized violence both in Iron Age cultures and 20th century Northern Ireland. The poem generates complex questions about collective violence, guilt, and the poet's own stance.
John Keats was a 19th century English Romantic poet known for his nature poetry. He found endless inspiration in nature, describing natural scenes and objects with precision. Keats believed the beauty imagined was superior to that perceived. Two of his famous nature poems are "Ode to a Nightingale" and "To Autumn", the latter celebrating the richness of the autumn season while also acknowledging its transience. Nature played a major role in Keats' work as both a source of joy and poetic inspiration.
This document discusses John Keats as a poet of sensuousness. It explains that sensuous poetry appeals to the senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell. It analyzes several of Keats' poems that exemplify his use of sensory details, including descriptions of a woman's hair and eyes, the music of a nightingale, extreme cold, different wines, and mingled flower perfumes. The conclusion states that Keats' senses revealed beauty to him and that he had a mastery of using sensuous details in his poetry, which is why he is considered a sensuous poet.
Seamus Heaney was an Irish poet born in 1939 in Northern Ireland. He drew inspiration from rural life and the natural world of his childhood. His works explored the conflict in Northern Ireland and sought to understand rather than condemn those involved. Heaney believed the poet's task was to examine the historical and psychological roots of violence. He used traditional forms and drew from Anglo-Saxon poetry to craft elegant, precise works that gave universal meaning to personal and political themes.
T.S. Eliot was one of the most influential literary critics of the 20th century. As a critic, he argued for the importance of tradition and history in poetry. He defended the metaphysical poets like Donne for their inventive use of conceits. Eliot also believed that poets after the 17th century experienced a "dissociation of sensibility" where they could no longer fuse thought and emotion. As a poet himself, Eliot's works helped change modern literature with poems like The Waste Land.
John Keats was an English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He had a difficult childhood, losing both his parents to tuberculosis by age 15 and caring for his brother Thomas who also died of tuberculosis in 1818. Despite working as a surgeon, Keats dedicated himself to poetry and published his first collection in 1817. His most productive period was 1819 when he wrote his famous odes. Keats was diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1820 and died later that year at age 25. He emphasized beauty, the senses, and the concept of "negative capability" in his poetry.
This document discusses John Keats' odes composed in 1819, including Ode to a Grecian Urn, Ode to Autumn, Ode to a Nightingale, and Ode to Psyche. It provides background on Keats and defines an ode as a poem expressing noble feelings and emotions. It analyzes themes within each ode, such as beauty, nature, mortality, and mythology. The odes use symbolic imagery and explore ideas around art, reality, imagination, and the relationship between past, present and future.
The document provides background information on John Keats' poem "Ode to a Nightingale". It was written in 1819 after Keats found inspiration from listening to a nightingale sing near his home. The poem uses the nightingale's song to explore themes of pain vs pleasure, reality vs transcendence, and an escape from life's difficulties. Through vivid sensory descriptions of nature and mythology, Keats expresses his joy at the bird's song but also a sense of melancholy and awareness of his own mortality.
- The Waste Land is a modernist poem by T.S. Eliot considered one of the most important poems of the 20th century.
- It is composed of five sections that combine references from Western literature and culture with Buddhist and Hindu scripture.
- The poem depicts the spiritual and moral decay of post-WWI Europe through fragmented images and voices, with themes of sexual perversion, the breakdown of civilization, and the search for spiritual salvation.
The document provides an analysis of John Keats' poem "Ode to a Grecian Urn". It includes the author's name, topic, and department submitted to. It then discusses some key aspects of the poem, including how Keats refers to the urn as an "unravish'd bride of quietness" and "foster-child of silence and slow time". It also explains how Keats sees the urn as a "sylvan historian" that tells a story through its images. One of the main themes Keats conveys is that "Beauty is a Truth and Truth is a Beauty".
The document provides an analysis of T.S. Eliot's modernist poem "The Waste Land" in 3 parts:
1. It summarizes the poem's structure consisting of 5 sections that use collages of images and allusions to myths.
2. It analyzes major themes of spiritual/cultural malaise in the modern world and the universality of the themes of life/death.
3. It discusses how characters like Tiresias and the use of mythical techniques give unity and provide cultural context for the poem's fragmented images.
This presentation provides an in-depth exploration of Samuel Beckett's iconic play, 'Waiting for Godot.' Through a series of thought-provoking slides, readers will gain a deeper understanding of the play's key themes, symbols, including the futility of human existence and the search for meaning in an absurd world. This presentation offers a fresh perspective on one of the most important plays of the 20th century. This presentation also discuss about various interpretation of the play including psychological interpretation.
Dejection: An Ode" was originally written as a letter to Sara Hutchinson, the woman Coleridge loved. The much longer original version contained references to Sara and William Wordsworth that were removed. Coleridge revised the poem significantly, shortening it and making it less personal. The poem describes Coleridge's inability to write poetry and living in a state of paralysis due to his unrequited love for Hutchinson.
Charles Dickens' 1854 novel Hard Times focuses on several characters in the industrial town of Coketown. Thomas Gradgrind espouses a philosophy of facts and rational thinking, raising his children without imagination or emotion. His daughter Louisa struggles to feel and connect with others. Louisa marries Josiah Bounderby, a wealthy factory owner who claims a false story of rising from poverty. The novel comments on social and economic conditions in 19th century England during the Industrial Revolution.
This document provides a summary of Eugene O'Neill's play Long Day's Journey into Night. It introduces the playwright Eugene O'Neill and notes that the play, set in 1912, depicts a day in the life of the Tyrone family as they torment one another. It describes the father being angry with the mother's drug addiction, the mother angry with her sons, and the sons angry with their parents. By midnight, all four family members suffer frustration and wish to escape their harsh reality, as love gives way to hate over the course of the long day.
Virginia Woolf was born in 1882 in London and did not receive a formal education. Her mother died when she was 13, which caused Virginia's first mental breakdown. She began writing reviews and tutoring. In 1912, she married writer Leonard Woolf. Together they founded the Hogarth Press in 1917. Virginia Woolf battled depression throughout her life and took her own life in 1941. She was a pioneer of modernist literature through her experimental styles and use of stream of consciousness in works like Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was an English poet, critic, and philosopher who was a leader of Romantic poetry. He divided imagination into primary and secondary forms. Primary imagination is a creative faculty possessed by all, while secondary imagination is the conscious, creative power of poets. Coleridge believed the purpose of poetry was to give pleasure, and defined a poem as having organic unity and seeking to produce immediate pleasure in readers through the willing suspension of disbelief. He saw imagination as the key distinguishing factor of a true poet.
George Eliot's 1860 novel The Mill on the Floss follows siblings Tom and Maggie Tulliver and their family. Mr. Tulliver owns the Dorlcote Mill but loses it after a lawsuit brought by Mr. Wakem. This causes financial and emotional strain on the family. Maggie and Tom grow apart as Tom resents Maggie's intellectual curiosity. Maggie falls for both Philip Wakem and Stephen Guest, but her love for them is rejected by society and contributes to her tragic fate when she and Tom die together in a flood while trying to save each other. The novel examines themes of love, sympathy, and the influence of society on individuals.
Hellenism refers to Greek culture and arts that developed in the 5th and 4th centuries BC. Though Keats did not know Greek, he was influenced by Greek culture through translations of classics, sculptures, and his own nature. This influence is seen in his use of Greek myths, legends, and themes of beauty, tragedy, and the relationship between truth and beauty. Keats admired ancient Greek art and culture and alluded to them frequently in poems like "Ode on a Grecian Urn" to convey his love of beauty.
Modern fiction in the early 20th century saw experimentation with new themes and techniques. Novelists like Henry James, Joseph Conrad, and Virginia Woolf explored hidden realities and psychological depths. They used techniques like stream of consciousness to represent complex inner thoughts. Modern novels dealt with a wide range of themes influenced by science and war. They presented life in realistic, and sometimes pessimistic, ways. The fragmented structures of novels reflected the disintegration of society. Overall, 20th century fiction moved away from traditional forms towards innovative styles that captured the uncertainties of modern times.
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is James Joyce's semi-autobiographical novel about Stephen Dedalus. It follows Stephen from childhood through his university years as he questions and rebels against Irish conventions of faith and family. Through Stephen's increasing use of stream of consciousness, the novel traces his intellectual and religious awakening. By the end, Stephen resolves to leave Ireland and devote his life to his art, seeking independence and escape from social and religious constraints, like the mythical creator Daedalus who fashioned wings to fly to freedom.
Wordsworth and Coleridge as a romantic poetNidhiDave30
油
William Wordsworth and S.T. Coleridge were major English Romantic poets. Wordsworth was born in 1770 in Cockermouth and was orphaned at a young age. He was influenced by the Lake District landscape. Coleridge was born in 1772 in Devonshire and was a founder of the Romantic movement in England. With Wordsworth, he published Lyrical Ballads in 1798, which included Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" and Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Both poets drew inspiration from nature and common life, though Coleridge also incorporated supernatural elements. Their works helped define the Romantic period in English literature.
The document summarizes the major themes in Thomas Hardy's novel Jude the Obscure. It discusses the themes of free will and human frustration, marriage, fate and the human predicament, social criticism, women in society, and religion. The characters in the novel question traditional beliefs and institutions and feel constrained by the rules of Victorian society. Through the tragic lives of Jude and Sue, Hardy critiques marriage, class divides, lack of opportunity for the working class, and gender inequality in his time.
- The document discusses John Keats and his concept of beauty and negative capability. It analyzes several of Keats' odes, including "Ode on a Grecian Urn", "Ode to a Nightingale", and "Ode to Psyche".
- Keats believed that beauty was truth and sought beauty in nature, mythology, and every art form. He found that change and the interplay between different worlds brought beauty.
- The document examines themes of conflict in Keats' odes between transient passion and enduring art, dream and reality, joy and melancholy, and other dualities. It explores Keats' theory of negative capability and how it influenced his poetic style and philosophy.
Mathew Arnold was a 19th century English poet and cultural critic. He worked as a school inspector and wrote extensively about social, cultural, religious, and educational issues. Arnold developed a "touchstone method" for evaluating poetry by comparing great lines from other works. He is known for his literary, social, journalistic, and religious criticism. In his work "The Function of Criticism at the Present Time," Arnold asserts that the function of criticism is to discern what will enrich society and that great literature acts as a "criticism of life."
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, his life and works
Prepared by Ahmad Hussain, Department of English,
Abdul Wali khan University Mardan.
Email: mr.literature123@gmail.com
Facebook page link for Literary students: www.facebook.com/englitpearls
A sudden feeling of knowledge that brings to light what was so far hidden and changes ones life is called epiphany. It is a term used by James Joyce in his works : Portrait of the artist as a youngman, Dubliners.
The New Criticism was a formalist style of literary criticism that emerged in the first half of the 20th century. It viewed texts as self-contained and focused on analyzing elements within the text like irony, ambiguity, and paradox to discover implied themes. Key figures in developing New Criticism included I.A. Richards, William Empson, and T.S. Eliot. The approach was popularized through works by Cleanth Brooks and others in the 1940s-1950s. New Criticism emphasized close reading of texts over historical context or authorial intent.
This document provides an overview of the English Romantic poet John Keats and his ode "To Autumn". It discusses Keats' life and some of his important works. It then analyzes the themes and imagery within "To Autumn", describing how the poem personifies Autumn and richly depicts the sights and sounds of the falling season through three stanzas. The document also notes how the poem has been interpreted as a meditation on death or artistic creation and is regarded as one of the most perfect short poems in English.
keats's poetry of romanticism and imaginationssuser38e71a
油
John Keats was a major English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He was orphaned as a teenager and pursued a career in poetry after abandoning medicine. Some of his most famous works include "Ode to a Nightingale" and "Ode on a Grecian Urn," both written in 1819. The document provides background on Keats' life and details about the themes, imagery, and form of these two odes, focusing on their exploration of themes like mortality, nature, and the relationship between art and the human experience.
- The Waste Land is a modernist poem by T.S. Eliot considered one of the most important poems of the 20th century.
- It is composed of five sections that combine references from Western literature and culture with Buddhist and Hindu scripture.
- The poem depicts the spiritual and moral decay of post-WWI Europe through fragmented images and voices, with themes of sexual perversion, the breakdown of civilization, and the search for spiritual salvation.
The document provides an analysis of John Keats' poem "Ode to a Grecian Urn". It includes the author's name, topic, and department submitted to. It then discusses some key aspects of the poem, including how Keats refers to the urn as an "unravish'd bride of quietness" and "foster-child of silence and slow time". It also explains how Keats sees the urn as a "sylvan historian" that tells a story through its images. One of the main themes Keats conveys is that "Beauty is a Truth and Truth is a Beauty".
The document provides an analysis of T.S. Eliot's modernist poem "The Waste Land" in 3 parts:
1. It summarizes the poem's structure consisting of 5 sections that use collages of images and allusions to myths.
2. It analyzes major themes of spiritual/cultural malaise in the modern world and the universality of the themes of life/death.
3. It discusses how characters like Tiresias and the use of mythical techniques give unity and provide cultural context for the poem's fragmented images.
This presentation provides an in-depth exploration of Samuel Beckett's iconic play, 'Waiting for Godot.' Through a series of thought-provoking slides, readers will gain a deeper understanding of the play's key themes, symbols, including the futility of human existence and the search for meaning in an absurd world. This presentation offers a fresh perspective on one of the most important plays of the 20th century. This presentation also discuss about various interpretation of the play including psychological interpretation.
Dejection: An Ode" was originally written as a letter to Sara Hutchinson, the woman Coleridge loved. The much longer original version contained references to Sara and William Wordsworth that were removed. Coleridge revised the poem significantly, shortening it and making it less personal. The poem describes Coleridge's inability to write poetry and living in a state of paralysis due to his unrequited love for Hutchinson.
Charles Dickens' 1854 novel Hard Times focuses on several characters in the industrial town of Coketown. Thomas Gradgrind espouses a philosophy of facts and rational thinking, raising his children without imagination or emotion. His daughter Louisa struggles to feel and connect with others. Louisa marries Josiah Bounderby, a wealthy factory owner who claims a false story of rising from poverty. The novel comments on social and economic conditions in 19th century England during the Industrial Revolution.
This document provides a summary of Eugene O'Neill's play Long Day's Journey into Night. It introduces the playwright Eugene O'Neill and notes that the play, set in 1912, depicts a day in the life of the Tyrone family as they torment one another. It describes the father being angry with the mother's drug addiction, the mother angry with her sons, and the sons angry with their parents. By midnight, all four family members suffer frustration and wish to escape their harsh reality, as love gives way to hate over the course of the long day.
Virginia Woolf was born in 1882 in London and did not receive a formal education. Her mother died when she was 13, which caused Virginia's first mental breakdown. She began writing reviews and tutoring. In 1912, she married writer Leonard Woolf. Together they founded the Hogarth Press in 1917. Virginia Woolf battled depression throughout her life and took her own life in 1941. She was a pioneer of modernist literature through her experimental styles and use of stream of consciousness in works like Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was an English poet, critic, and philosopher who was a leader of Romantic poetry. He divided imagination into primary and secondary forms. Primary imagination is a creative faculty possessed by all, while secondary imagination is the conscious, creative power of poets. Coleridge believed the purpose of poetry was to give pleasure, and defined a poem as having organic unity and seeking to produce immediate pleasure in readers through the willing suspension of disbelief. He saw imagination as the key distinguishing factor of a true poet.
George Eliot's 1860 novel The Mill on the Floss follows siblings Tom and Maggie Tulliver and their family. Mr. Tulliver owns the Dorlcote Mill but loses it after a lawsuit brought by Mr. Wakem. This causes financial and emotional strain on the family. Maggie and Tom grow apart as Tom resents Maggie's intellectual curiosity. Maggie falls for both Philip Wakem and Stephen Guest, but her love for them is rejected by society and contributes to her tragic fate when she and Tom die together in a flood while trying to save each other. The novel examines themes of love, sympathy, and the influence of society on individuals.
Hellenism refers to Greek culture and arts that developed in the 5th and 4th centuries BC. Though Keats did not know Greek, he was influenced by Greek culture through translations of classics, sculptures, and his own nature. This influence is seen in his use of Greek myths, legends, and themes of beauty, tragedy, and the relationship between truth and beauty. Keats admired ancient Greek art and culture and alluded to them frequently in poems like "Ode on a Grecian Urn" to convey his love of beauty.
Modern fiction in the early 20th century saw experimentation with new themes and techniques. Novelists like Henry James, Joseph Conrad, and Virginia Woolf explored hidden realities and psychological depths. They used techniques like stream of consciousness to represent complex inner thoughts. Modern novels dealt with a wide range of themes influenced by science and war. They presented life in realistic, and sometimes pessimistic, ways. The fragmented structures of novels reflected the disintegration of society. Overall, 20th century fiction moved away from traditional forms towards innovative styles that captured the uncertainties of modern times.
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man is James Joyce's semi-autobiographical novel about Stephen Dedalus. It follows Stephen from childhood through his university years as he questions and rebels against Irish conventions of faith and family. Through Stephen's increasing use of stream of consciousness, the novel traces his intellectual and religious awakening. By the end, Stephen resolves to leave Ireland and devote his life to his art, seeking independence and escape from social and religious constraints, like the mythical creator Daedalus who fashioned wings to fly to freedom.
Wordsworth and Coleridge as a romantic poetNidhiDave30
油
William Wordsworth and S.T. Coleridge were major English Romantic poets. Wordsworth was born in 1770 in Cockermouth and was orphaned at a young age. He was influenced by the Lake District landscape. Coleridge was born in 1772 in Devonshire and was a founder of the Romantic movement in England. With Wordsworth, he published Lyrical Ballads in 1798, which included Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" and Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Both poets drew inspiration from nature and common life, though Coleridge also incorporated supernatural elements. Their works helped define the Romantic period in English literature.
The document summarizes the major themes in Thomas Hardy's novel Jude the Obscure. It discusses the themes of free will and human frustration, marriage, fate and the human predicament, social criticism, women in society, and religion. The characters in the novel question traditional beliefs and institutions and feel constrained by the rules of Victorian society. Through the tragic lives of Jude and Sue, Hardy critiques marriage, class divides, lack of opportunity for the working class, and gender inequality in his time.
- The document discusses John Keats and his concept of beauty and negative capability. It analyzes several of Keats' odes, including "Ode on a Grecian Urn", "Ode to a Nightingale", and "Ode to Psyche".
- Keats believed that beauty was truth and sought beauty in nature, mythology, and every art form. He found that change and the interplay between different worlds brought beauty.
- The document examines themes of conflict in Keats' odes between transient passion and enduring art, dream and reality, joy and melancholy, and other dualities. It explores Keats' theory of negative capability and how it influenced his poetic style and philosophy.
Mathew Arnold was a 19th century English poet and cultural critic. He worked as a school inspector and wrote extensively about social, cultural, religious, and educational issues. Arnold developed a "touchstone method" for evaluating poetry by comparing great lines from other works. He is known for his literary, social, journalistic, and religious criticism. In his work "The Function of Criticism at the Present Time," Arnold asserts that the function of criticism is to discern what will enrich society and that great literature acts as a "criticism of life."
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, his life and works
Prepared by Ahmad Hussain, Department of English,
Abdul Wali khan University Mardan.
Email: mr.literature123@gmail.com
Facebook page link for Literary students: www.facebook.com/englitpearls
A sudden feeling of knowledge that brings to light what was so far hidden and changes ones life is called epiphany. It is a term used by James Joyce in his works : Portrait of the artist as a youngman, Dubliners.
The New Criticism was a formalist style of literary criticism that emerged in the first half of the 20th century. It viewed texts as self-contained and focused on analyzing elements within the text like irony, ambiguity, and paradox to discover implied themes. Key figures in developing New Criticism included I.A. Richards, William Empson, and T.S. Eliot. The approach was popularized through works by Cleanth Brooks and others in the 1940s-1950s. New Criticism emphasized close reading of texts over historical context or authorial intent.
This document provides an overview of the English Romantic poet John Keats and his ode "To Autumn". It discusses Keats' life and some of his important works. It then analyzes the themes and imagery within "To Autumn", describing how the poem personifies Autumn and richly depicts the sights and sounds of the falling season through three stanzas. The document also notes how the poem has been interpreted as a meditation on death or artistic creation and is regarded as one of the most perfect short poems in English.
keats's poetry of romanticism and imaginationssuser38e71a
油
John Keats was a major English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He was orphaned as a teenager and pursued a career in poetry after abandoning medicine. Some of his most famous works include "Ode to a Nightingale" and "Ode on a Grecian Urn," both written in 1819. The document provides background on Keats' life and details about the themes, imagery, and form of these two odes, focusing on their exploration of themes like mortality, nature, and the relationship between art and the human experience.
This document provides background information and analysis of John Keats's poem "Ode to a Nightingale". It begins with biographical details of Keats and contextualizes his work within the Romantic period. It then discusses the themes, structure, and inspiration for "Ode to a Nightingale", including Keats's exploration of nature, transience, mortality, and the contrast between the immortal nightingale and mortal man. The document analyzes the nightingale's song as a complex image representing human experience and notes how the poem depicts conflicts between reality and romantic ideals of uniting with nature.
Presentation of the John keats odes by Zarghoona KakarZarghoona Kakar
油
The poem describes scenes depicted on an ancient Greek urn, including lovers in a forest glade and villagers leading a sacrifice. The speaker wonders about their stories and muses that the urn has captured these moments in eternal stillness outside of time. He envies the urn's ability to preserve beauty without change or decay. The poem ends with the urn uttering the cryptic message "Beauty is truth, truth beauty," leaving the meaning open to interpretation.
Kubavat Kishan submitted a paper on John Keats' romantic poem "Ode to Autumn" for his second semester English literature course at M.K. Bhavnagar University in 2014-15. The poem personifies Autumn as a harvester completing the seasonal tasks of reaping, gleaning and cider-pressing. It depicts the ripening of fruits and the sounds of birds, lambs and insects in the evening. The poem symbolizes Autumn as a representation of maturity and the close of the natural year.
This summary analyzes the poem "The Grasshopper and the Cricket" by John Keats. It describes how the poem depicts the grasshopper enjoying summer while the cricket provides song in winter, showing how nature's poetry is immortal through the changing seasons. The 14 line poem follows a Petrarchan sonnet structure with an octave discussing the grasshopper on a hot summer day, and a sestet shifting to a winter scene focusing on the cricket's song. Keats uses opposing images and the natural pauses of the lines to emphasize how nature's beauty survives regardless of extreme heat or cold. The summary analyzes the themes, structure, imagery and rhetorical devices used in this poem.
John Keats was an English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He had a difficult childhood and was influenced by his time as a medical student. Though he chose poetry over medicine, his writing career was short due to his early death from tuberculosis at age 25. Some of his most famous works produced in his last few years included the 1819 odes such as "Ode to a Nightingale" and "Ode to Autumn." Keats found endless inspiration in nature and believed if poetry did not come naturally it was not worthwhile. He celebrated the beauty of the natural world through vivid descriptions in his poetry.
This document discusses John Keats and his concept of negative capability. It provides biographical details of Keats and defines negative capability as a writer's ability to be comfortable with uncertainties and doubts. It analyzes several of Keats' odes written in 1819, focusing on themes of transience versus permanence. It also discusses conflicts explored in the odes and describes Keats' "Ode to Autumn" as progressing like a short story through the seasons. Negative capability is highlighted as opening doors to imagination for poetic expression.
John Keats was a famous English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He came from a working-class family and lost both parents at a young age. Keats devoted himself entirely to poetry and found inspiration in nature, Greek classics, and other poets. Some of his most famous works include the poems "Ode on a Grecian Urn", "Ode to a Nightingale", and "Ode to Autumn". Keats tragically died young at age 25, but his poems are still greatly admired for their beauty and exploration of themes like mortality.
This is the Romantic Literature Presentation,
here I talk about the John Keats as a Romantic Poet.
1) Poetry of Escape
2 ) Motif
3) Five sense and Art
4) Conclusion
This presentation is submitted to Smt. S. B. Gardi Department of English.
Vencido pela paix達o e pela morte prematura, John Keats supera a morte e permanece vivo atrav辿s da beleza de seus versos, da grandeza de seu louvor s formas belas e da riqueza de sua express達o, com que busca a revela巽達o do que h叩 de po辿tico no mundo e penetra a ess棚ncia da poesia rom但ntica..
This document provides an analysis of John Keats's ode "To Autumn". It introduces Keats and discusses when the poem was written. It then analyzes the form and structure of the ode, which is written in three stanzas with an ABAB rhyme scheme in the first part and a variable rhyme in the second part. Each stanza describes a different aspect of autumn: the first stanza addresses autumn's abundance, the second describes autumn as a female figure, and the third tells autumn not to wonder where spring went but to listen to its own sounds of nature.
John Keats was a prominent English Romantic poet born in 1795 in London. He wrote prolifically in his short career and is now considered one of the most influential British poets. He was part of the second generation of Romantic poets alongside Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley. Keats's poetry is characterized by lush sensory imagery, especially in his famous Odes. He was interested in themes of nature, beauty, imagination, and mortality. Though his life and career were brief, Keats made major contributions to Romantic poetry.
John Keats was a famous English poet from the Romantic era. He composed six famous Odes in 1819, including "Ode to a Nightingale" and "Ode on a Grecian Urn", which explored themes of beauty, nature, emotion, and the imagination. The Odes represented Keats' attempt to create a new form of short lyrical poem that influenced later generations of poets.
This document provides the course syllabus for a poetry class at Paravathy Arts and Science College in Dindigul, India. It lists 5 units that will be covered in the class from June to November 2019. Each unit focuses on different poems and poets, including works by Robert Burns, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Keats, Alfred Tennyson, Robert Browning, and others. Brief analyses are provided for some of the poems. The document also lists the head of the English department and class instructor.
This course provides students with a comprehensive understanding of strategic management principles, frameworks, and applications in business. It explores strategic planning, environmental analysis, corporate governance, business ethics, and sustainability. The course integrates Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to enhance global and ethical perspectives in decision-making.
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Theme of odes- Johan Keats
1. Topic:- Theme of odes
Submitted to: Heenaba Zala
Smt. S.B. Gardi
Department of English
M.K.Bhavnagar University, Bhavnagar.
2. John Keats was born on 31 October
1795 to Thomas and Frances
Jennings Keats in Central London
He was a second generation
Romantic poet.
His first surviving poem An
Imitation of Spenser comes in
1814, when Keats was nineteen.
Other works considered to be among
Keats's greatest are the odes
published in 1820.
3. The word ode is of Greek
origin, meaning sung.
An ode is a poem of a noble
feeling and expression of dignity
to someone/ something loved.
It may be regular or irregular on
its verse form, depending upon
the emotional needs of its subject.
4. In 1819, John Keats composed six odes in a short period
of time that have become some of his most famous
poems.
These odes represent Keats's attempt to create a new
type of short lyrical poem, which influenced later
generations.
Keats's odes work compare to Gujarati Literature Poet
& Poetry like:
Kalapis Poet Agiya Nightingale
6. An urn was a kind of vase generally made by marble or of
brass. Often different kinds scene and situation were carved
on the outer surface of urn. Keats conveys his ideas about
various scenes depicted on the urn.
According to Charles Patterson :
ode to Grecian urn gives as much important to passion
as to the idea of performance.
Beauty is truth, truth is beauty
REALITY
IDEAL ART
IMAGINATION
URN
9. Autumn Female
Goddess
Temporality,
morality and
change
Autumn Old
age or death
In the first stanza :
the poet describes
the fruit of autumn
,the fruit coming to
maturity in readiness
for harvesting .
In second stanza:
Autumn is
personified as a
woman present at the
various operations of
the harvest.
In the last stanza: The End of
the year is associated with
sunset, the song of spring are
over night is falling , but
there is no felling of sadness
because autumn gas its own
song.
11. If youve read To Kill a Mockingbird,
you know why its a sin to kill a
mockingbirdthey do nothing but
sing, so they do not harm humans in
any way. They do not destroy
property, they eat pesky insects, and
their singing is beautiful.
The birds Anglo-Saxon name,
nihtingale, means night
songstress.
14. Ode to
Nightingale
Ode to
Autumn
Ode to
Grecian Urn
Ode to Psyche
Beauty of
nature and
Human life
Beauty of
Season Beauty of Urn
Beauty of
Psyche
Tragedy
Human life
Beauty
Birth
Ripeness
Death
Past
Present
Feature
Myth
Religion
Love