Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Keats’ Fear and Tichborne’s Acceptance: Death Essay -- Poetry Analysis

Death is inevitable. Chidiock Tichborne and John Keats in their poems Tichbornes Elegy and When I have fears that I may cease to be convey death in opposite ways. Tichborne through his poetic style, shows an acceptance of his death, as a result of reflecting on a life fulfilled, but unrecognized. While Keats, expresses a fear of death, where he contemplates that he will not be able to experience have it off or fame. Both these poets have lead lives that varied from each(prenominal) other in ways that are most revealed through their use of form, metaphors, repetition, punctuation and rhyme schemes. Moreover, both poets express and explore deep rooted human emotions such as, nostalgia, pain, love and a feeling of insatiability. Although Tichbornes Elegy and When I have fears that I may cease to be share a common theme because each speaker contemplates the inevitability of his death, their perceptions differ mainly as a result of their circumstances. John Keats explores his fear of d eath in When I have fears that I may cease to be in the form of a Shakespearean Sonnet. The poem contains three quatrains that interlock his primary fears together, leading to a couplet that expresses his remedy and last-place thoughts. His primary fears are expressed with respect to the abab cdcd efef gg rhyme scheme of the Shakespearean Sonnet, with each fear contained in each rhyming quatrain. His number one fear, in the first quatrain is dying without living up to his full potential as a writer, when he states, Before my pen has gleand my teeming brain (2). This business enterprise indicates that he has not expressed through his pen, all that is on his mind, and leads into the second quatrain with the use of a semicolon which suggests that the next part of the poem is connecte... ...eats as well, when he refers to the edge of the wide world it symbolizes the world of his experiences, which he ponders on. It is only by deeper inspection of these symbols can a clear idea of w hat the poets are expressing be understood. By study both these poems, it is evident that although death is the focus of both these poems, Tichborne has accepted it, while Keats fears it, but has found a way to resolve his fears.Works Cited Hatzitsinidou , Evangelia . Fates(Moirae)-the spinners of the thread of life. Greek-Gods.Info- Greek Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Greece. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Oct. 2010. . Vendler, Helen. The Poem as Life, The Poems as Arranged Life. Poems, Poets, Poetry An Introduction and Anthology. Third Edition ed. Boston Bedford/St. Martins, 2009. 18,68. Print.

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