"Comparison of william blake and john keats" Essays and Research Papers

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    Analysis of Keats’ To Autumn John Keats’ poem To Autumn is essentially an ode to Autumn and the change of seasons. He was apparently inspired by observing nature; his detailed description of natural occurrences has a pleasant appeal to the readers’ senses. Keats also alludes to a certain unpleasantness connected to Autumn‚ and links it to a time of death. However‚ Keats’ association between stages of Autumn and the process of dying does not take away from the "ode" effect of the poem.

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    With his individual visions William Blake created new symbols and myths in the British literature. The purpose of his poetry was to wake up our imagination and to present the reality between a heavenly place and a dark hell. In his Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience he manages to do this with simplicity. These two types of poetry were written in two different stages of his life‚ consequently there could be seen a move from his innocence towards experience. He was born on November 28‚ 1757

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    William Blake was a romanticist poet‚ who wrote poems during the Industrial Revolution. He was born on 28th November 1757 in Westminster‚ but spent most of his life in London. William became an engraver at the age of fifteen and on each of his poems original prints‚ there is an engraved picture. He eventually owned a business in engraving. When he was nearly 25 he married a lady called Catherine Bouchier‚ whom he was happily married to for 45 years. In 1784 he published his first volume of poems

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    present moment is the opportunity to appreciate nature’s beauty in a more passionate way. Possibly the fact that John Keats had been witness to the slow and painful deaths of many close relatives from tuberculosis‚ as had happened with his younger brother Tom the previous winter of the composition of the odes‚ it has made him more concerned with these three “enemies”. On the other hand Keats was in love with Fanny Brawne‚ so she could have been the inspiration to appreciate the nature’s beauty in time

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    Written in four stanzas‚ London by William Blake uses an ‘A‚ B‚ A‚ B’ rhythmic pattern. More in a lyrical form‚ the poem is basically about someone where he wanders in London and describes his thoughts and observations. He sees poverty‚ misery‚ and despair on people’s face and notices how London is a hideous and corrupted place with injustice in every corner. The poem starts with a sinister and gloomy atmosphere which quickly gives an idea to the reader what the author thinks of London. I noticed

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    Innocence Poems Introduction The narrator is a piper who is happily piping when he sees a child on a cloud. The child tells him to pipe a song about a lamb. He does so and the child weeps on hearing it. He then asks the piper to sing. He sings the same song and the child cries with joy when he hears it. The child then tells the narrator to write a book and disappears. The piper takes a reed to make a pen. With it he writes happy songs for children to bring them joy. This poem sets the tone

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    Adult Living in Despair William Blake was a first generation Romantic poet‚ along with Samuel Coleridge and Charles Woodsworth. Each poet had an archetype which meant they had some form of Byronic hero within them and wanted to find a way to escape their bodies. Blake focused on the social rebel. He believed governments and institutions were corrupt and all the people had a right to fight against them. He was more than just a poet‚ he was also an illustrator. He wanted to combine pictures and words

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    getting rid of the terrible smell the disease gave the victims. “Ashes to ashes‚ we all fall down” of course is symbolic of how many people were killed and the cremation of their bodies. There are many similarities between these nursery rhymes and William Blake’s poem‚ “The Chimney Sweeper‚” printed in the first half his book‚ Songs of Innocence. “The Chimney Sweeper” is written in the same whimsical tone‚ and can also be considered a British nursery rhyme. Most people when they think of chimney

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    The use of children is a prominent theme in William Blake’s poems. He sees the world through the eyes of a child and embraces the innocence of the young. He illustrates this style in poems such as "the lamb"‚ "the little black boy"‚ and "the chimney sweeper". The lamb really illustrates the innocence and purity of a young child. The boy questions the lamb as to where it came from and he expects the lamb to answer back‚ but it is obvious to the reader that the lamb cannot talk. As the boy receives

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    This sonnet is an attempt by Keats to link the natural life cycles of birth‚ life‚ death‚ and rebirth to the four seasons and from there to the nature of human existence. Taken literally‚ the poem is essentially a very eloquent description of the four seasons of spring‚ summer‚ autumn and winter‚ applied to the "mind of man" or the human demeanor. If interpreted in a more metaphorical sense‚ the poem takes on a distinctly different meaning. Keats opens the sonnet by establishing the fact that "There

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