John KeatsHarvard University Press, 1963年1月1日 - 780页 The life of Keats provides a unique opportunity for the study of literary greatness and of what permits or encourages its development. Its interest is deeply human and moral, in the most capacious sense of the words. In this authoritative biography—the first full-length life of Keats in almost forty years—the man and the poet are portrayed with rare insight and sympathy. In spite of a scarcity of factual data for his early years, the materials for Keats’s life are nevertheless unusually full. Since most of his early poetry has survived, his artistic development can be observed more closely than is possible with most writers; and there are times during the period of his greatest creativity when his personal as well as his artistic life can be followed week by week. |
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... written in couplets . The sonnet " To My Brother George " is perhaps the best that Keats had yet written . He is not now writing to Byron , whom he has never seen and does not at this point even begin to understand . He is not writing ...
... written off daily , & with few erasures . That Bailey should have recalled the rate of Keats's writing so ex- actly after thirty - one years suggests how much of a point Keats had made of it as a goal . So regularly did Keats maintain ...
... writing of another . For the “ Ode to a Nightingale " was composed in a single morning . Of no other of the dozen - or score - of the greatest lyrics in English do we know , as a fact , that it was written in so short a time . More ...