In his poem "Ode on a Grecian Urn" — which many of us perhaps first encountered in high school English class — John Keats asks readers to contemplate a different conception of time. The speaker is ...
Keats: Ode to a nightingale. Three sonnets: On first looking into Chapman's Homer ; To one who has been living in city pent ; When I have fears that I may cease to be. La belle dame sans merci. Ode on ...
Maybe it was Amanda Gorman speaking her poem, “The Hill We Climb” at the inauguration last month, or maybe it’s the bitter cold and stark white of a Minnesota winter, but I find myself yearning for ...
We tend to think of John Keats as, in Lucasta Miller’s provocative phrase, “the most romantic of the Romantic poets.” He’s the pure soul—so the legend goes—who died at only 25, penniless, passionately ...
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