Odes of John Keats

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A01=Helen Vendler
aesthetic
allegory
Author_Helen Vendler
beauty
Category=DSBF
Category=DSC
coleridge
cupid
diction
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
hyperion
imagery
imagination
language
melancholy
milton
moneta
muse
mythology
nightingale
psyche
representation
rhetoric
romanticism
spenser
subject
trope
truth
wordsworth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674630765
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 147 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 1985
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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“Simply superb.”
The Nation

A landmark study reconstructs the magnificent architecture of Keats’s odes beam by beam.

With the exception of Shakespeare, John Keats has garnered more critical attention than probably any other English poet, above all for his six great odes. Composed in the span of just a few months in 1819, the odes mark the high point of Keats’s all-too-short literary career, forming, as Helen Vendler puts it, “the group of works in which the English language finds an ultimate embodiment.”

Even with the mountain of criticism that precedes it, The Odes of John Keats nonetheless accomplishes something bracingly new: it reveals that the odes, typically read separately, demand to be read as a unified whole. Only when we read them together, Vendler argues, do we see how each ode builds upon, and contradicts, the one that came before it—a progression that expresses Keats’s sustained and deliberate inquiry into nature of creativity itself. From fruitless revery in “Ode on Indolence,” to successive explorations of music and mimetic art in “Ode to a Nightingale” and “Ode on a Grecian Urn,” to the final triumph of lyric poetry in “To Autumn,” each ode advances tentative theses about the relationship between truth, beauty, and sensory experience, only to subsequently overturn them from a higher vantage point.

Exquisitely attentive to the warp and weft of Keats’s “many languages,” from Greek mythology to eighteenth-century allegory, Vendler’s architectonic reading masterfully achieves criticism’s highest aim: keeping these classic poems, to borrow Keats’s own words, “forever warm and still to be enjoy’d.”

Helen Vendler (1933–2024) was a leading poetry critic and the author of nineteen books on poets from William Shakespeare to Seamus Heaney. A winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism, she contributed regularly to the New Yorker, the New York Review of Books, the New York Times Book Review, London Review of Books, and the New Republic. She was the Arthur Kingsley Porter University Professor at Harvard University.

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