"More happy love, more happy, more happy!" (Keat, line 25). When people read such boundaries, people can not help, I think the poet must be very happy. But John Keats's poem "Bondage of Ancient Greece" is not so. At first glance, the tone of this poem seems to be bright and gorgeous. But when deeply studying poetry for people to find their potential meaning, people will find that the tone of this poem is very pathological.
Keats 'Keats Yangko and Nightingale' s John Keats combined with the two immortal things "Greeks of Greeks" and "Night", tried to escape the harshness of human life. In "Nightingale", Keats tried to connect with the chirping of birds as the music did not know anything about aging and death. Keats has the same motivation in "the age to ancient Greeks" and tried to connect three separate images of the mysterious cymbal. Connection ... The analysis of "Westerly Winds" by Westerly Windsley originally looked more complicated than it actually was. The structure of poetry is like a long and complicated sentence, because the main sentence does not appear to the end. The point of the 54 poem was interrupted for 56 lines and then the reader saw clearly what Shelley said to the west wind and why he said so. In the first four quarters, Shelley described the westerly wind in three different ways.
In the first section, John Keats spoke to ancient Greek singer, the speaker stood in front of the scorpion of ancient Greece, settled the shackles. It is "still quiet and quiet bride", "silence and take time to raise children". He will also explain it as a "historian" who can tell stories. He wants to know the character next to, what kind of legend they are drawing, and where they came from ... they ask them ... various verses. In front of John Keats, we have witnessed the widespread use of literary skills. Keats uses various methods to evoke sensual worlds throughout the poems. His "Song", "Soul", "Night", "Autumn", and "Melancholy" all have amazing abilities to evoke the reader's senses through the versatile and widespread use of literary poetic techniques is showing. In Keats 'Night', we saw a physical sensation.