diagnosis of terminal tuberculosis‚ Keats focused on death and its inevitability in his work. For Keats‚ small‚ slow acts of death occurred every day‚ and he chronicled these small mortal occurrences. The end of a lover’s embrace‚ the images on an ancient urn‚ the reaping of grain in autumn—all of these are not only symbols of death‚ but instances of it. Examples of great beauty and art also caused Keats to ponder mortality‚ as in “On Seeing the Elgin Marbles” (1817). As a writer‚ Keats hoped he would live
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Truth versus Immortality in John Keats’ “Ode on a Grecian Urn” In John Keats’ “Ode on a Grecian Urn‚” the speaker admires the immortality and excitement of life depicted on an urn‚ before realizing that the truth of life and mortality is preferable to static eternal existence. The speaker suggests that the young figures depicted on the urn are frozen in time forever‚ and therefore will eternally be young‚ carefree‚ and beautiful. It’s suggested that such immortality is inferior to mortal existence
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Review of "Ode on a Grecian Urn" by John Keats The "Ode on a Grecian Urn" portrays what Keats sees on the urn himself‚ only his view of what is going on. The urn‚ passed down through many centuries portrays the image that everything that is going on on the urn is frozen. In the first stanza‚ the speaker‚ standing before an ancient Grecian urn uses apostrophe when he speaks to the urn as if it is alive. The speaker describes the pictures as if they are frozen in time. It is the "still unravish’d
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Joudee Laurence Ward English 112 26 April 2013 “Ozymandias” “Ozymandias” is a sonnet written by the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. In the poem‚ the author meets a traveler from another country who explains that he once saw a statue of Ramesses the Great (also known as Ozymandias)‚ and on the pedestal‚ the words “My name is Ozymandias‚ king of kings: Look on my works‚ ye Mighty‚ and despair!” appear. The words on the statue suggest that Ozymandias had achieved great and long-lasting things during
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Paying attention to subject matter and style‚ discuss the effectiveness of “Ozymandias” as a poem. An artist paints with colors; a poet uses lines and stanzas‚ and just as we must look deeply at a picture‚ our cursory reading of a poem cannot dictate our final opinion about the effectiveness of a poem. Accordingly‚ an in-depth reading of “Ozymandias‚” would make it possible for one to determine the effectiveness of subject matter while also seizing the opportunity to appreciate its style. At the
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Ozymandias Submitted by : Brooke Hutt Submitted to: Mr. MacDonald Submitted on: June 3‚ 2014 "Ozymandias" is a fourteen-line sonnet. It is not a traditional one‚ however. Although it is neither an Italian sonnet nor a Shakespearean sonnet‚ the rhyming scheme and style resemble an Italian sonnet more. The speaker it the poem is learning from a traveler about a giant‚ ruined statue that lay broken and eroded in the desert. The title of the poem informs
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Ozymandias I met a traveller from an antique land Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert... Near them‚ on the sand‚ Half sunk‚ a shattered visage lies‚ whose frown‚ And wrinkled lip‚ and sneer of cold command‚ Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive‚ stamped on these lifeless things‚ The
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all has been turned to dust by the impersonal‚ indiscriminate‚ destructive power of history. The poem remains primarily an ironic and compelling critique of Ozymandias and other rulers like him‚ but it is also a striking meditation on time-bound humanity. In this poem Shelley attempts to highlight the true value of language and poetry. Ozymandias makes the point that language has an immortality which other art forms do not. It is for this reason that Shelley also asserted ’all
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OZYMANDIAS 1. What kind of man was the Pharaoh Ozymandias‚ do you think? Quote from the poem to substantiate your answer. 2. The poet takes great care to describe‚ in lines 4 and 5‚ the ‘passions’ of Ozymandias that are ‘stamped on these lifeless things’ (line 7). What is the effect of the juxtaposition of ‘passions’ and ‘lifeless’? What is Shelley suggesting about human ambition? 3. The ‘hand’ and the ‘heart’ (line 8) are‚ of course‚ the hand and heart of the sculptor‚ not Ozymandias. Discuss
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1. Ozymandias is the name of one of Egypt’s most famous pharaoh and the place was called an “antique land” suggests that the country referred to has an older history such as Ancient Egypt. 2. The statue was described as “vast” and “boundless”. 3. The original monument was a royal tomb or religious temple to Ozymandias. 4. The ‘shattered visage’ is the face of Ozymandias‚ the pharaoh. 5. “Read” means that the sculptor understands and is able to reproduce the exact features of Ozymandias
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