The Poetry of John KeatsMonarch Press, 1965 - 77页 |
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共有 16 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第14页
... SLEEP AND POETRY , " INTRODUCTION : conversation ran on so late at Leigh Hunt's cottage that Keats was offered a bed for the night in Hunt's study . Excited and unable to sleep , the young poet began composing some lines in his head ...
... SLEEP AND POETRY , " INTRODUCTION : conversation ran on so late at Leigh Hunt's cottage that Keats was offered a bed for the night in Hunt's study . Excited and unable to sleep , the young poet began composing some lines in his head ...
第15页
... Sleep is represented specifically as unconsciousness , but beyond that , and in more general terms , it is seen as the universal and necessary yielding of the mind to the basic demands of the body and of life . It is dark , intuitive ...
... Sleep is represented specifically as unconsciousness , but beyond that , and in more general terms , it is seen as the universal and necessary yielding of the mind to the basic demands of the body and of life . It is dark , intuitive ...
第33页
... sleep ? " the poet asks at the end of his " Ode to a Nightingale , " a question which Madeline also asks . The girl , determined to see the face of her future husband in a dream , has - as the ritual requires her to do - foregone ...
... sleep ? " the poet asks at the end of his " Ode to a Nightingale , " a question which Madeline also asks . The girl , determined to see the face of her future husband in a dream , has - as the ritual requires her to do - foregone ...
常见术语和短语
achieve Agnes Aileen Ward ANALYSIS Apollo artist autumn ballad Bate beauty begins Belle Dame brother Chapman's Charles Cowden Clarke City Pent cricket critics death dream Endymion Eve of St experience fact Fanny Brawne forever girl goddess Grecian Urn Greek happy Homer human Hunt's images immortality INTRODUCTION Isabella JAMES-The John Hamilton Reynolds John Keats Keats wrote Lamia last line later Leigh Hunt letters literary Long in City lovers Madeline man's metaphor mind Moneta mortal negative capability night Nightingale Ode on Indolence Ode on Melancholy Ode to Psyche oxymoron paradox perfect perhaps Philosophy phrase Plays poem poet's poetic Porphyro reality rhyme Romantic seems sensual sentimental SHAKESPEARE-The Shelley silent sing Sleep and Poetry song sonnet sorrow spring stanza form Stood Tip-Toe story symbol tale theme things third stanza thou Titans truth unheard melodies verse vision Walter Jackson Walter Jackson Bate words write written young poet