ode on a grecian urn
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Ode on a Grecian Urn. Conlan Campbell, Andrew Brinkmann. By John Keats. !. Summary. You unchanged, quiet work of art You adopted child of history Historian who is mute A tale that is sweeter than our rhyme What old message is on you Of men or gods or both In places of rural beauty - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Ode on a Grecian Urn
Conlan Campbell, Andrew Brinkmann
By John Keats
!
SummaryYou unchanged, quiet work of art
You adopted child of history
Historian who is mute
A tale that is sweeter than our rhyme
What old message is on you
Of men or gods or both
In places of rural beauty
Who are these men? Who are these reluctant women?
What chase is this? What attempt at escape is this?
What drums and flutes? What excitement?
Music that is heard is sweet but unheard music
Is sweeter so your pipes play on
Not to the refined taste but instead
Play simple songs that have no complication
Child beneath the trees, you can't leave
Your song and the trees will always have leaves
Lover you can never kiss
No matter how close you get, but do not be sad
She will never leave though you can't be with her
Forever you will have your love and she will be beautiful
The happy trees cannot not lose
Their leaves and spring will not end
And the musician
Will forever play songs that will stay new
There will be love
Forever and never losing it's impact
Forever new
All human feelings will stay
That make your heart feel almost ill
And make you feel nervously sick
What people are going to the ceremony?
To where are they going, priest
Do you lead that cow mooing
With her fancy attire
What small seaside town
Or mountain fortress
Is missing it's people this holy morning?
The small town, which is empty
Will be completely silent with no one to say
Why it is empty and none will return
Oh elegant shape! Good attitude! With interwoven design
Of stone men and overexcited maidens
With nature effected by man
Your form takes us out of our thoughts
As does our time you cold work of art
When we become old
You will remain, never fully experiencing troubles or love
You will be ours and you will say to us
"Truth and beauty are the same
That is all you know, and all you need to know"
John Keats
• Born near London in 1795
• Lost his biological father and many siblings to disease or accidents
• Left a career in medicine to write when he was twenty
• Earlier works received harsh feedback
• Between 1880 and 1820, Keats published his most well-known works
"Here lies one whose name has writ on water"
• Keat's work was never fully appreciated or realized until after his death
• Keats knew before his death that he would be remembered as a far greater writer than when he was alive
• Died at age 25
Context
• John Keats was a romantic, writing near the end of the Romantic period.
• Feelings, nature, impulses
• Keats admires the trees, the music
• Deals with feelings and other concepts
• Love, music, beauty
Form
• Ode on a Grecian Urn is in fairly strict iambic pentameter with only a few variations.
• There is consistent rhyming in the poem despite an inconsistent rhyme scheme.
Theme
• One theme that Keats emphasizes in this poem is the fleeting nature of time and how people should appreciate things before they are gone.
• Beauty in youth• Timelessness • Frailty in mortality
Theme
• Another theme is the tie between truth and beauty and how both come from one another
• There is much debate about the meaning of the last two lines of the poem
• Speaks of beauty being what is true
• Presumably how truth appears in youth versus old age; looking back
Annotated Bibliography
"Biography." John-Keats.com. N.p., 26 Feb. 2000. Web. 22 Apr. 2013. <http://www.john-keats.com/>.
A. This source deals with John Keats's life and career, along with some of his motivations and downfalls.
B. This source contains factual information published by a poetry authority, amd has its own domain
name.
C. This source will help to gain further insight on Keats’s life and the context of his poems.
"A Brief Guide to Romanticism." - Poets.org. Academy of American Poets, n.d. Web. 24 Apr. 2013.
<http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/5670>.
A. This source is a definition and description of literary romanticism.
B. This source is published by an esteemed poetry association and it’s credibility rests on its good reputation as a source of information and regular site maintenance.