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John Keats. John Keats (1795-1821), renowned poet of the English Romantic Movement, wrote some of the greatest English language poems including "La Belle Dame Sans Merci", "Ode To A Nightingale", and "Ode On a Grecian Urn"; O Attic shape! Fair attitude! With bredeOf marble men and maidens overwrought,With forest branches and the trodden weed;Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thoughtAs doth eternity: Cold pastoral! When old age shall this generation waste,Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woeThan ours, a friend to man, to whom thou sayst,"Beauty is truth, truth beauty,--that is allYe know on earth, and all ye need to know.

" John Keats was born on 31 October 1795 in Moorgate, London, England, the first child born to Frances Jennings (b.1775-d.1810) and Thomas Keats (d.1804), an employee of a livery stable. He had three siblings: George (1797-1841), Thomas (1799-1818), and Frances Mary "Fanny" (1803-1889). After leaving school in Enfield, Keats went on to apprentice with Dr. John Keats- The Romantic Context. For some critics the defining feature of Romanticism is the belief in the mind's active perception of truth and reality which is, in effect, the process of the creative imagination.

Rather than seeing the mind as separate and distinct from the outside world, able to analyse it and dissect it through the proceesses of reason, the Romantic poets perceived a potential harmony between the human mind and the outside world based on an undersanding of the 'one life' which ran though both nature and humanity. Unlike reason the imagination is a synthesising not an analytical power. For Wordsworth this expressed itself in a belief in the perception of the absolute through nature, that the poet's imagination or 'creative sensibility' enabled him to 'see into the life of things' and through his creative vision understand and apprehend the spiritual unity of the universe which included all humanity, nature and God.

Keats and the imagination 1) His ideas as expressed in his letters: 1. 2. 3. Hyperion Critical Essay by John Keats. Hyperion John Keats The following entry presents criticism of Keats's epic poem Hyperion, comprised of two unfinished versions, written in 1818 and 1819 respectively. See also, John Keats Criticism. Constructed as two poems, Hyperion and its attempted revision as The Fall of Hyperion are considered important works by John Keats.

Although both were unfinished, these poems are some of Keats's most ambitious and successful writings, within which he integrates his theories of aesthetics with his ideas on mortality and morality. In drawing upon mythology and earlier poets' works in the Hyperion poems, Keats addressed issues that were pivotal in the Romantic period, including concerns about beauty and truth, imagination, knowledge, and the connection between art and life. Biographical Information Hyperion was undertaken during what many critics consider Keats's most intense period of creative productivity, a period also marked by personal difficulties. Plot and Major Characters Major Themes. Romanticism. If the Enlightenment was a movement which started among a tiny elite and slowly spread to make its influence felt throughout society, Romanticism was more widespread both in its origins and influence.

No other intellectual/artistic movement has had comparable variety, reach, and staying power since the end of the Middle Ages. Beginning in Germany and England in the 1770s, by the 1820s it had swept through Europe, conquering at last even its most stubborn foe, the French. It traveled quickly to the Western Hemisphere, and in its musical form has triumphed around the globe, so that from London to Boston to Mexico City to Tokyo to Vladivostok to Oslo, the most popular orchestral music in the world is that of the romantic era. After almost a century of being attacked by the academic and professional world of Western formal concert music, the style has reasserted itself as neoromanticism in the concert halls. Origins: Folklore and Popular Art Nationalism Shakespeare The Gothic Romance Medievalism.

John Keats : What are the characteristics of his Poetry ? | Articles | Eng. With a pure poet, the pursuit of beauty overcomes every other consideration. The poetry of Keats is an unending pursuit of beauty. He pursued truth indeed, but truth for him was beauty. He never intellectualised his poetry. He was gifted with extraordinary sensibility and had an ardent passion for the beauty of the visible world. All his poetry is full of the sensuous appeal of beautiful things. O Wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being. But the beauty and grandeur of the west wind goes beyond our actual experience. Spontaneity and concentration of thought and feeling. Keats was a pure poet in the sense that in his poetry he was a poet and nothing else—not a teacher, not a preacher, not a conscious carrier of any humanitarian or spiritual message. What he experienced and felt upon his pulse he expressed. Submission to the truth of life and experience Keats possessed what Bradley calls "the Shakespeare on strain", and submitted to the truth of life.

Pursuit of truth.