html5-img
1 / 25

Moon Light section: A number course: 3214

Moon Light section: A number course: 3214. أحلام عبد الله فرعون أفنان عبد الله أبو الحسن تهاني راشد الغامدي حنان حسين القحطاني خلود عبد العزيز النهدي. John Keats.

colman
Download Presentation

Moon Light section: A number course: 3214

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Moon Lightsection: Anumber course:3214 أحلام عبد الله فرعون أفنان عبد الله أبو الحسن تهاني راشد الغامدي حنان حسين القحطاني خلود عبد العزيز النهدي

  2. John Keats

  3. John Keats is an amazing poet whose style and writing technique inspired many and contributed to the new ear of romanticism . • He used a wide range of vocabulary and sensual imagery to turn his exact feelings into words . • John Keats was a lively and brilliant old-English poet whose works were often overlooked

  4. John Keats , born in 1795 . • At a very age both his mother and his father passed away , increasing responsibility and strain on his life . • Due to these tragedies he chose to write about the romanticism and sensual imagery his parents lacked . His writing helped him cope with the stress and fears of losing his parents . • Keats begans writing poetry in his teens and published his first book , poems , in 1817 , which received very harsh criticism by the poetic world . • Sadly , John Keats died in 1821 , at the age of 25 from tuberculosis , ironically increasing the popularity of his poetry.

  5. His poetic experiments using romance carried well into  the 19th century inspiring others . • poems about love and romance were not well known in his time and he chose this to establish his uniqueness.

  6. John was ahead of his time with his poetry ,which brought the dislike of many . • His poems were not fully understood by several and confused others. • Keats was growing poet whose individuality and style brought a new era of romance into the world after his young life ended suddenly .

  7. John was surprisingly unique poet and was not afraid to get his paws wet. This was both a good and bad thing for him. • While he was alive almost all his poem got horrible reviews and critics disliked them . • But as time went on and more poets started using Keats style it became obvious that his original works were genius .

  8. Bright Starby John Keats

  9. Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou artNot in lone splendor hung aloft the nightAnd watching, with eternal lids apart,Like nature's patient, sleepless Eremite,The moving waters at their priestlike taskOf pure ablution round earth's human shores,Or gazing on the new soft-fallen maskOf snow upon the mountains and the moorsNo--yet still steadfast, still unchangeable,Pillow'd upon my fair love's ripening breast,To feel for ever its soft fall and swell,Awake for ever in a sweet unrest,Still, still to hear her tender-taken breath,And so live ever--or else swoon to death.

  10. Steadfast= Unchanging, constant. aloft= Above, high over the earth. lids= Eyelids. Eremite= Hermit, usually with a religious connotation. pure ablution= A religious cleaning; ritual washing.

  11. The poem has seven prominent qualities:Firstly, it appeals us for its grandeur of diction. Its diction is grand, sonorous and impressive.Secondly, it attracts us for its riches of imagery. Metaphors are well-chosen, smiles are appropriate, images are vivid, and descriptions are fascinating.Thirdly, it inspires us with its deep lyrical impact.

  12. Fourthly, it astonishes us with its dramatic appeal.Fifthly, it elevates us with its sublimity of thought.Sixthly, this poem impresses with its loftiness of imagination. Seventhly, this poem grips our mind with its sincerity of experience and intensity of observation.

  13. The sonnet "Bright Star" by Keats is a masterpiece of lyrical poetry. The poet expresses a burning desire for a permanent physical union with his beloved.

  14. A “Bright Star” is a sonnet that shows his infatuation to be with his lover for eternity. The poem’s main theme deals with the love and appreciation of things that are unchanging. This theme is brought up many times in the poem. For example, Keats uses a bright star and the earth to describe his desires to be immortal, and unchanged. He expresses deep feelings toward his lover, and if he had to live without her, he would welcome death.

  15. The poet wants to be constant like the star, but in a different way. He does not want to be alone like the star. He wants to inhale the sweetness of her fragrant breath. He wants to hear the heavenly music of her tender heart beats. But, if this were not possible, he would like to faint to death, sleeping on her breath.

  16. In the first two lines, Keats shows us that he would love to be around forever and full of life.“Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art”. A star implies something that is around forever and unchanging because, in spite of occurrences throughout life, the star will reside in the sky each night. Adding bright to the star shows the importance of life to it and that to be unchanging alone is not enough for admiration.

  17. “Not alone splendor hung aloft the night”. This line states the bright star is not alone in its brilliance, but is accompanied by other stars. With this line, Keats expresses the importance of companionship and the fear of being alone.

  18. “And watching, with eternal lids apart, Like nature’s patient, sleepless Ermite”.Using the term eternal lids apart projects Keats’ immortality and human characteristics because he cannot see everything and grows tired. If he could be a bright star, he would see his love endlessly without losing desire. Line four compares the earth to the bright star. Like the star, the earth is sleepless and, therefore, full of life and lasting forever. Patient implies the earth’s ability to be unaffected by the events that occur around it. The earth continues its course around the solar system un-waverly.

  19. Keats then continues his poem,“The moving waters at their priest like task / Of pure abolition round earth’s human shore’s”. The water acts as a purifier to the earth like a priest blesses his children. Keats desires to have this quality in order to earn the advantage of revitalizing himself. Keats knows that he is subsequent to change and needs something to return to his pure state.

  20. “Or gazing on the new soft-fallen mask Of snow upon the mountains and the moors”In these lines ,Keats brings about another quality of earth, in which he has deep admiration towards. He describes snow as being a mask that hides the ugliness of the mountains and moors. These in-depth feelings show insecurity about a certain unattractiveness that he possesses.

  21. Keats now shows us his real intent of the poem by describing his emotional journey to be with his lover eternally and without change.“No — yet still steadfast, still unchangeable / Pillow’d upon my fair love’s ripening breasts”. His deep emotions appear in line ten as he yearns to be as close as possible to his love. Keats’ true motive is revealed in that he strides for an eternal, unchanging existence only to be with her.

  22. “To feel for ever its soft fall and swell, Awake for ever in a sweet unrest” Now Keats explains that he has yet another desire, in which his lover be alive for eternity. The interpretation of soft fall and swell could only represent the precious breaths taken by his lover everyday of her eternal life. Her presence is necessary in Keats’ life because he has an undying love for her. Keats implicitly describes being with her in a wakeful state forever without the troubling effects of mortality, which would prevent him from spending every possible second with her due to sleep.

  23. Keats’ concludes his poem by displaying a powerful statement that if he cannot hear his lover breathe, he will welcome his own death with no regrets.“Still, still to hear her tender-taken breath, / And so live ever—or else swoon to death.”.Keats shows that as long as he can be with his lover, he will live forever. But if they must part, then he welcomes death. This describes Keats’ feelings towards life where death brings no fear and life means nothing without his lover.

  24. John Keats explains to us his feelings toward his human emotions, which leaves no room to explore his deeper spiritual desires. He tends dip into mystic and unexplained events in the universe to describe his feelings. This is probably due to the fact that his earthly human self is on the verge toward death and his spiritual side is fully alive.

  25. Thank you..

More Related