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John KeatsLibros
31 de octubre de 1795 – 23 de febrero de 1821
John Keats es una figura central del movimiento romántico inglés. A pesar de enfrentar ataques críticos constantes de las revistas de la época durante su corta vida, su influencia póstuma en poetas posteriores, como Alfred Tennyson, ha sido profunda. Su poesía se distingue por su elaborada elección de palabras e rica imaginería sensorial, especialmente evidente en una serie de odas que representan sus obras maestras y perduran como algunos de los poemas más queridos de la literatura inglesa. Las cartas de Keats, que articulan su teoría estética de la "capacidad negativa", son célebres por sus reflexiones sobre la creación artística.
This edition, based on careful study of the manuscript sources, includes every poem, verse drama, and fragment known to have been written by Keats. A commentary by Buxton Forman on the early printed editions, a chronology of Keat's life, and a note on the wealth of manuscript material complete the authoritative text.
John Keats lost both his parents at an early age. His decision to commit
himself to poetry, rather than follow a career in medicine, was a personal
challenge, unfounded in any prior success. His first volume of poetry,
published in 1817, was a critical and commercial failure. This book tells his
story.
This authoritative edition was formerly published in the acclaimed Oxford
Authors series under the general editorship fo Frank Kermode. It brings
together a unique combination of Keats's poetry and prose - all the major
poems complemented by a generous selection of Keats's letters - to give the
essence of his work and thinking.
For this reason, this volume presents the writings in the order of publication rather than composition. Readers can trace the poems through letters, reviews, and related material chronologically interleaved with the texts themselves. This edition offers extensive apparatus to help readers fully appreciate Keats s poetry and legacy, including an introduction, headnotes, explanatory annotations, and a wealth of contextual documents. Criticism includes twelve important commentaries on Keats and his poetry, by Paul de Man, Marjorie Levinson, Grant F. Scott, Margaret Homans, Nicholas Roe, Stuart Sperry, Neil Fraistat, Jack Stillinger, James Chandler, Alan Bewell, and Jeffrey N. Cox.
The books in this A Level poetry series contain a glossary and notes on each page. The approach encourages students to develop their own responses to the poems, and an A Level Chief Examiner offers exam tips. This text contains poems and letters by Keats in chronological order.
John Keats's abiding poetic legacy is one of the extraordinary and triumphant
richness. This selection, chosen from the Oxford Authors critical edition of
Keats's major works, demonstrates the remarkable growth in maturity of his
verse, from early poems such as Imitation of Spenser' to later work such as
The Eve of St Agnes' and the famous Odes.
One of the greatest English poets, John Keats (1795–1821) created an astonishing body of work before his early death from tuberculosis at the age of 26. Much of his poetry consists of deeply felt lyrical meditations on a variety of themes—love, death, the transience of joy, the impermanence of youth and beauty, the immortality of art, and other topics—expressed in verse of exquisite delicacy, originality, and sensuous richness.This collection contains 30 of his finest poems, including such favorites as "On first looking into Chapman's Homer," "The Eve of St. Agnes," "On seeing the Elgin Marbles," "La Belle Dame sans Merci," "Isabella; or, the pot of Basil" and the celebrated Odes: "To a Nightingale," "On a Grecian Urn," "On Melancholy," "On Indolence," "To Psyche," and "To Autumn." These and many other poems, reproduced here from a standard edition, represent a treasury of time-honored poetry that ranks among the glories of English verse.