Title: John Keats
1John KeatsOde to a Nightingale
- By Frankie, Anthony, and Cameron
2John Keats
- John Keats (1795-1821) was born in England as the
oldest of four surviving children, died of
tuberculosis at age 25 - His father fell off a horse and cracked his skull
when Keats was 8, his mother died of tuberculosis
when he was 14 - Keats was put in the custody of his grandmother,
who appointed two guardians for Keats - He was removed from school in 1810 to become a
surgeons apprentice, but chose to write instead
of using his apothecary license
3Keats and His Contemporaries
- Keats became acquainted with Leigh Hunt
(influential editor of the Examiner, who
published O Solitude and On First Looking into
Chapmans Homer. - Hunt then introduced Keats to Percy Shelly and
William Wordsworth - Influenced by these writers, Keats published a
volume of poems that received negative reviews,
with the exception of Shelleys opinion. - Keats declining health over the years is often
attributed to his broken spirit after receiving
so many unfavorable reviews of his poetry.
4Ode to a Nightingale
First Stanza Keats, in his heartache, feels as
though he has drunk poison, but declares that he
does not envy the nightingale for being happyin
fact, he revels in the fact that the bird sings
so happily in the forest. Second Stanza Keats
wishes for wine that tastes like Dance and the
country green so that he could use alcohols
psychological effects on the mind to float away
with the nightingale.
5Ode to a Nightingale
- Third Stanza Keats lists things that the
nightingale has never known, such as palsy, and
solemnly admits that in the human world, youth,
beauty, and love dont last forever. - Fourth Stanza Keats decides that he will not use
wine to float away with the bird. Though the
dull brain perplexes, he tells the bird to fly
away, so that he can follow it on the wings of
poetry.
6Ode to a Nightingale
- Fifth Stanza Keats writes that although he cant
see the different flowers, he can use each
flowers scent to label them in the embalmèd
darkness. - Sixth Stanza Keats has been half in love with
the idea of dying. The nightingales song would
make dying then and there easier, but his ears
would then only be able to hear the birds song
in vain.
7Ode to a Nightingale
Seventh Stanza Keats comments on the birds
immortality, saying it sang for emperors in
ancient days. He also writes that the birds
song could open magic casements. Eight Stanza
Keats halts his adoration of the nightingale to
concentrate on himself. He is saddened by the
birds flight elsewhere and by his seeming lack
of imagination.
8Literary Devices, Allusion
- The River Lethe Greek and Roman mythology,
underworlds river of forgetfulness - Flora Roman goddess of flowers
- Hippocrene Muses fountain
- Bacchus (and his leopards) Roman god of wine
- Ruth widow who left her people for a new land.
9Literary Devices, Alliteration/Assonance
- Fade far awayand quite forget/the fever and
the fret - Perhaps the self-same song/the sad heartsick
for homestood in tears - While thou art pouring forth thy soul abroad
- Thou was not born for death, immortal Bird
10Literary Devices, Personification
- Death Called him soft names
- Fancy cannot cheat so well
- Youth grows pale
- Beauty cannot keep her lustrous eyes
- Love pine at them.
11Literary Devices
- Synesthesia Describes one sensation in terms of
another (i.e. sound as taste, color as
sound) - Diction/Style
- Uses archaic words (beechen thine, thou, thee)
- Elevated Vocabulary verdurous, palsy, plaintive
anthem, embalmed, lustrous
12The More You Know
- An ode is a complex, long lyric poem on a serious
subject, intimate, meditative not a story, but
emotions and thoughts - Keats use of slant rhyme (been green)
- Ode to a Nightingale is an example of
Quintessential Romanticism.
13Works Cited
"John Keats." Poets,org. 2010. Web. 1 Feb 2010.
lthttp//www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/66gt.
14Thanks for Reading, Signed