Abstract This thesis argues that the two poems ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ and ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ written by John Keats in 1819 are modelled on the sonnet-form. In this sense they stand as examples of experimentations in poetic form common among Keats and his contemporaries. But they also reflect traditional rhetorical structures inherent in such forms. By adapting the rhetorical themes of polarity, desire, and poetic urge from Renaissance love-sonnets, Keats’s two odes combine and develop these topics together with the increased interest among his fellow poets in the relation between the inner and the outer world and the workings, questions, and responses of the subjective mind. The two odes play on both these traditions; and in uniting var...
Of the many topics which have fascinated Keats's readers, three are remarkable for the continuing di...
“Heard melodies are sweet but those unheard/ Are sweeter...” These lines are only an instance of the...
Romantic poets, including John Keats, were known for their emphasis on nature as an imaginative cogn...
We notice in Keats's poems a predominantly large number of sensuous images. These images, however, a...
Artistically Keats's Nightingale Ode is one of his best conceived and most satisfying and as such mo...
This paper examines how Keatss odes written in 1819 take the form of a pastoral to explore the possi...
This paper states the romantic painter Haydon's great influence on the original poet Keats's sonnet ...
This thesis is a study in the theory and composition of mythological poetry in the work of John Kea...
This thesis examines the poetry of John Keats through an exploration of his attitude towards reading...
Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale is famous for the poet’s flight of imagination to attain the blithe spir...
This study argues that John Keats is a poet whose key consideration is empathy and who possesses the...
The research paper depicts the movement of the speaker between the real and the ideal world. John Ke...
Most critics of John Keats do not consider his sonnets a major element of his poetic development. Ye...
This thesis presents a series of readings of poems by John Keats (1795-1821), and traces through his...
This dissertation describes, analyzes, and traces the development of the man-poet figure in Keat\u27...
Of the many topics which have fascinated Keats's readers, three are remarkable for the continuing di...
“Heard melodies are sweet but those unheard/ Are sweeter...” These lines are only an instance of the...
Romantic poets, including John Keats, were known for their emphasis on nature as an imaginative cogn...
We notice in Keats's poems a predominantly large number of sensuous images. These images, however, a...
Artistically Keats's Nightingale Ode is one of his best conceived and most satisfying and as such mo...
This paper examines how Keatss odes written in 1819 take the form of a pastoral to explore the possi...
This paper states the romantic painter Haydon's great influence on the original poet Keats's sonnet ...
This thesis is a study in the theory and composition of mythological poetry in the work of John Kea...
This thesis examines the poetry of John Keats through an exploration of his attitude towards reading...
Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale is famous for the poet’s flight of imagination to attain the blithe spir...
This study argues that John Keats is a poet whose key consideration is empathy and who possesses the...
The research paper depicts the movement of the speaker between the real and the ideal world. John Ke...
Most critics of John Keats do not consider his sonnets a major element of his poetic development. Ye...
This thesis presents a series of readings of poems by John Keats (1795-1821), and traces through his...
This dissertation describes, analyzes, and traces the development of the man-poet figure in Keat\u27...
Of the many topics which have fascinated Keats's readers, three are remarkable for the continuing di...
“Heard melodies are sweet but those unheard/ Are sweeter...” These lines are only an instance of the...
Romantic poets, including John Keats, were known for their emphasis on nature as an imaginative cogn...