Selected LettersOxford University Press, 2002 - 435 pages Keats's letters have long been regarded as an extraordinary record of poetic development. According to T. S. Eliot, Keats's letters are "the most notable and most important ever written by any English poet." They represent one of the most sustained reflections on the poet's art we have from any of the major English poets. Yet quite apart from the light they throw on the poetry, they are great works of literature in their own right. Written with gusto and occasionally painful candor, they show a powerful intelligence struggling to come to terms with its own mortality. Sometimes bitterly jealous in love and socially and financially insecure, at others playful and confident of his own greatness, Keats interweaves his personal plight with the history of a Britain emerging from the long years of the Napoleonic Wars into a world of political unrest, profound social change, and commercial expansion. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-5 sur 9
Page 97
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 100
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 109
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 110
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Page 111
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Le contenu de cette page est soumis à certaines restrictions..
Table des matières
18161817 | 3 |
To George and Tom Keats 5 January | 43 |
To Benjamin Bailey 18 22 July | 127 |
1819 | 164 |
To B R Haydon 17 June | 243 |
To James Rice December | 317 |
To Fanny Brawne May ? | 349 |
Appendix | 371 |
Sources of Manuscript Letters | 419 |
427 | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Abbey affectionate Brother John affraid Bailey beautiful Bedhampton Benjamin Bailey Book Brown call'd called Charles Covent Garden dear Fanny dear Reynolds delight Dilke endeavour Endymion eyes Fanny Brawne Fanny Keats February feel friend John Keats George and Georgiana give Hampstead happy Haslam Haydon Hazlitt hear heard heart Hessey hope Horace Smith human Hunt's idea imagination Isle Isle of Wight J. H. Reynolds Keats's Lady Leigh Hunt letter literary live London look mind Miss morning Mother Mountains never night pass perhaps Peter Bell pleasure poem poet poetry political Port Patrick Rice Robert Gittings seems seen Shakespeare Shanklin Shelley Sister Sonnet soon sort soul speak spirits sweet talk Taylor Teignmouth tell thee thing thou thought Tom Keats Town walk Wentworth Place William Hazlitt wish word Wordsworth write written wrote yesterday