|
Do you have any comments, criticism, paraphrasis or analysis of this poem that you feel would assist other visitors in understanding this poem better? If they are accepted, they will be added to this page of Poetry Connection. Together we can build a wealth of information, but it will take some discipline and determination.
Do not post questions, pleas for homework help or anything of the sort, as these types of comments will be removed. The proper place for questions is the poetry forum. Also, please do not post any links what so ever.
Please note that after you post a comment, it can take up to an hour before it is visible on the website! Rest assured that your comment is not lost, so don't enter your comment again.
|
This version is the 19th-century one, probably an editor's invention (though it could be a variant tried by Keats). See "In drear-nighted December" on this site for a version now more generally accepted as Keats's own. The important change is in line 21: "The feel of not to feel it" rather than "To know the change and feel it".
Charles Hartman from United States