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Página 19
The dream-goddess seems, in Keats's intention, to represent the supreme aspect
of ideal beauty which is ideal love; what he mainly describes is in fact the
sensuous earthly passion which, at least in its earlier stages, brings torment with
it.
The dream-goddess seems, in Keats's intention, to represent the supreme aspect
of ideal beauty which is ideal love; what he mainly describes is in fact the
sensuous earthly passion which, at least in its earlier stages, brings torment with
it.
Página 20
The dream-goddess is a symbol of the ideal, which Keats sincerely worshiped,
but she is nine parts flesh and blood and one part Platonic. For Endymion, as for
Philip Sidney, “Desire still cries, 'Give me some food,'” and he cannot, with high ...
The dream-goddess is a symbol of the ideal, which Keats sincerely worshiped,
but she is nine parts flesh and blood and one part Platonic. For Endymion, as for
Philip Sidney, “Desire still cries, 'Give me some food,'” and he cannot, with high ...
Página 144
prefatory idyl, that suggests the sort of ideal union represented or symbolized by
the recurrent pairs of lovers in Keats's earlier poems. The difference is that now
the whole affair is relegated to a nonhuman realm. With it, to some extent, is also
...
prefatory idyl, that suggests the sort of ideal union represented or symbolized by
the recurrent pairs of lovers in Keats's earlier poems. The difference is that now
the whole affair is relegated to a nonhuman realm. With it, to some extent, is also
...
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Contenido
INTRODUCTIONWalter Jackson Bate | 1 |
SCEPTICISM IN | 71 |
THE ODE TO PSYCHE AND THE ODE ON MELANCHOLY | 91 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
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