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Comment 9 of 9, added on June 4th, 2006 at 2:27 PM.
WHAT SOLUTION DOES KEATS EXPRESS IN THE COUPLET AT THE END? IS IT SATISFACTORY?
JOSH from Canada
Comment 8 of 9, added on March 30th, 2006 at 12:16 AM.
seriously, just think about that first line... When I have Fears That I May Cease to Be.... how powerful is that? John Keats is my favorite poet by far.
H from Canada
Comment 7 of 9, added on March 28th, 2006 at 10:45 AM.
i really need help on this poem b/c i have to do a research paper. and i dont know how to start it off.please help me
Lana from United States
Comment 6 of 9, added on March 28th, 2006 at 10:21 AM.
Dear Angela
The poem "When I have Fears" is obviously a descriptive satire piece discussing the political situation currently taking place in the Middle East, specifically Iraq. His allusions to "high-piled books" is a reference to all the problems in your life. The cause of these is that you simply must do your assigned work for your English class. Upon completion of this, in addition to not using MySpace your problems will be solved and your project easily finished. That is all, thank you. Good night and good luck. And as we say on the East Coast of the Czech Repub. Peace Out homie-g dawg!
Iannnnnnnn
Iannnnnnnnnn from Czech Republic
Comment 5 of 9, added on March 27th, 2006 at 11:26 AM.
I have to do this poem for research for a teacher and it's really hard because it's so short and I have to write 1000 words on it.
Shamkea Jackson from Bahamas
Comment 4 of 9, added on February 24th, 2006 at 1:20 PM.
Keats narrative sonnet is a masterful reminder of life's fragility. The reader is allowed insight to his youth and quandry within about life soon to end. He exposes his fear of incompletion in a mind he has only gleaned the surface of. Published works "garner (stand high) the full ripen'd grain" as these works are editions composed by those who've benefitted from establishing their characters and fulfilling a long, rich life unlike his own threatened life. The following lines infer sleepless nights with thoughts of love and companionship as revealed in the next line when considering opportunity as: 'the magic hand of chance'- is lost without reminders/memories as in: shadows.
His love deeply professed, 'fair creature of an hour', is brief for his circumstance is impending. His love is deep enough to wish/want for reflecting/lasting/lifelong love, but where he stands, he stands alone. In that moment of fallibility, he ponders what, if anything, has he left behind?
In the moment, as he stood and thought about his life ending, he thought for us all. In so doing, he did not die in vain, but lives on in the veins of the poet.
Sharon Letendre from United States
Comment 3 of 9, added on November 9th, 2005 at 10:40 AM.
John Keats composed this poem on January 31, in1818, it is one of his the most beautiful sonnets. He in this poem describes the insignificance of love, fame and other ideals. He fears before death that he will die prior to the realisation of the motive behind his poetry. He will no more see the face of his beloved. Love and fame appear to him vain and every worldly thing loses its charm. John Keats, the poet in this beautiful sonnet anticipates his death and apprehends different fears. He might have written this sonnet anticipating that he might die at any moment as he died of consumption at the early age of twenty-six when he had sublime and dignified ideals in front of him to be achieved. That is why he fears that he might die before the realisation of his ideals. His apprehension of death may have deprived him of the joy of looking at his beloved’s charming face. When death encroaches quite near, he realises the nothingness of love and fame. No doubt death is the time of sleep but it awakens the poet and he is revealed that fame, love and wealth which had been the centre of his activities in fact are nothing and nothing will sink into nothingness. He feels repentance that he neglected death which is the ultimate reality.
One must keep in his mind that the poet is not merely afraid of death, but his is afraid of death before the expression of his teeming brain, he is afraid because he finds himself standing on the shore of the world all alone, unaccompanied, without love and fame. Death without any achievement makes him worried, he knows that sooner or later he has to crease but before his death he wants to capture the beauties of night starred face, and huge floating clouds of sublime romantic thoughts. He finds the whole universe in front of him as a field of full-ripened grain; he is merely afraid of death before collecting and gathering the harvest and saving it in the bins to be relished by the coming generation. The poet is willing to die; he prefers death to life where love is unreflecting, he only loves objects of permanence. He is revealed while standing alone on the shore of the world that love and fame which are pursued blindly by Man or in fact to sink into the ocean of nothingness. The poet is of the opinion that permanence can only be achieved in the form of gleaning sublime romantic thoughts, creating things of beauty, pouring out the teeming brain. Keats' poetry was mainly concerned with beauty, love, romance and fame. This sonnet contains all these elements. All his life he cherished in his mind the idea of beauty, according to him “a thing of beauty is a joy for ever.” Despite praising and enjoying beauty he led a dejected and melancholy life. He feared that he might miss the beauty of his thoughts, of romantic ideas, in case death approaches him untimely. He demands a span of time enough to harvest and collect the scattered grain of poetic lofty ideals and then wishes to die in contentment after fulfilment of his mission.
Muhammad Shanazar from Pakistan
Comment 2 of 9, added on October 13th, 2005 at 11:21 AM.
The wholeethos of Keats is is love of beauty and sorrow at beauty passing: "Then glut thy sorrow on a morning rose..." In this sonnet he expresses concisely, and with a beauty of language which is so typical of all his work, his fears that he will achieve all he wishes. The will not have time to pen all his thoughts, to acquire the knowledge in the "high piled" books, to fulfil his dream of love and even that he will lose the tranisstory pleasure he finds in beauty of all sorts. But surely the ending is the summation of the sonnet - laying his fears to rest as he percieves himself as "nothing" in the vast scheme of things?
Mary from United Kingdom
Comment 1 of 9, added on July 30th, 2005 at 9:13 PM.
to fully understand the poem it is essential that we understand the circumstances the poet was in during that period .here was a young man in love and far from his love ,aware of of his impending death ,and yet finding the courage and conviction to write this most defiant of poems on death and love .the trade mark rich sensuous imagery so typicalof keats is on full display.
sharath from India
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WHAT SOLUTION DOES KEATS EXPRESS IN THE COUPLET AT THE END? IS IT SATISFACTORY?
JOSH from Canada