Friday, July 19, 2019
Romanticism in Keats Poetry Essay -- John Keats Sensual Language Essa
Romanticism in Keats' Poetry    Keats uses various poetic techniques and themes to emphasise these  ideas of romanticism the "the strange, the sensual and the dream".  These themes and techniques are the back bone of the Ode's which allow  the reader to feel and use their imagination which was the main reason  Keats wrote his poems.    Keats uses incredibly sensual language to illustrate how he is feeling  and what he is imagining which gives the ode's a sensual feeling of  being alive. In Keats' "Ode to Autumn" he is using a large amount of  sensual language to try and take us to the place in his mind, his  choice of words are hugely important for making Autumn a sensual Ode.  In the first stanza he is focusing very much on the sense of taste and  sight to paint the picture of summer ready to explode into autumn with  words like "load", "fill", "ripeness", "swell" and "plump" these words  are all very sense orientated with the desire to show the peak point  before it all rots and turns to autumn. He uses the sensory language  to generate an atmosphere he wants the reader to feel what he is  feeling.    The theme of sensual language continues into stanza two as the poem  developes and as the season Autumn goes into this state of pure bliss.  He uses highly sensual language like "oozing hours by hours" this is  almost onomatopaeic as he is dragging us into the sense of stillness,  this place he is describing is very relaxed a beautiful place to be  in, he uses many vowels to get us into a drugged state of mind liek  the season "fume of poppies" the language and the season is  intoxicating a place of no worries. This stanza is very sensual it is  slow moving and lazy "thee" this is the place Keats wants to be, this  sensual language...              ... seems a contriversal thing to say as it could also be seen as  blasfemic putting a poet "priest" on the same pedastoole as God. His  whole dream like state is extremly strange saying he is going to  build a garden in his mind for psyche and to let "warm love in!" love  is welcome to come in with him, this dream seems to be about the  relationship between the soul and love.    I do agree with this statement however I do feel there are some far  more improtant and more widley used romantic ideals in his poems than  the strange and the dream however sensual is a very important feature  that runs through all of his Ode's whether it is describing beauty of  art in Urn or nature in Autumn he uses sensual language in all of his  Ode's and that is the main thing that makes the reader ask questions  at the end after you have been taken to into his other reality, his  dream.                        
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