John Keats poem's "First Looking into Chapman's Homer", "Seeing the Elgin Marbles for the First Time"
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Words: 462
Pages: 2
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 2
(approximately 235 words/page)
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John Keat's poems, On First Looking into Chapman's Homer, and On Seeing the Elgin Marbles for
the First Time, express an irresistible, poetical imagination. They convey a sense of atmosphere to the
reader. In comparison they exemplify his intense love of beauty. The connection between these two
poems is not so much in subject, but the feeling of awe. Both these poems show more emotion and
amazement in the experience of discovering something new. Keats
showed first 75 words of 462 total
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showed first 75 words of 462 total
showed last 75 words of 462 total
He writes with an intense delight at the sheer existence of things outside himself, and seems to lose himself in his own mortality and the identification of the object he contemplates. His imagination is unleashed on the works of poetry and art that so amazed him. Keats style of poetry speaks of truth in beauty. His motto is captured in a line of his own poetry -'A thing of beauty is a joy forever.'
He writes with an intense delight at the sheer existence of things outside himself, and seems to lose himself in his own mortality and the identification of the object he contemplates. His imagination is unleashed on the works of poetry and art that so amazed him. Keats style of poetry speaks of truth in beauty. His motto is captured in a line of his own poetry -'A thing of beauty is a joy forever.'