Sunday, March 24, 2019
Using ââ¬ËOde on Melancholyââ¬â¢ and one other, examine how Keats uses languag
Using Ode on  wo and one other, examine how Keats  enjoyments  diction to  search his musesKeatsIn Ode on Melancholy Keats accepts the truth he sees joy and  incommode  ar inseparable and to  perplex joy fully we moldiness experience sadnessor melancholy fully. The  early stanza urges us not to  refine and escapepain stanza two tells us what to do instead -  grok the transientbeauty and joy of the nature and human experience, which contain painand death. Stanza three makes clear that in order to experience joy wemust experience the sorrow that beauty dies and joy evaporates. Themore intensely we  timber happiness, the more subject we are tomelancholy.The poets passionate outcry not to  re sightt melancholy is  typifyednegatively  no, not, neither, nor. The degree of pain thatmelancholy may  exercise is implied by the ways to avoid it, for examplego to Lethe and suffer thy  watch forehead to be kissed bynightshade The first two words, No, no, are  both(prenominal) accented,emphasising    them their forcefulness expresses convincingly thespeakers passionate state. In the first stanza, the language usedpresents the  swooning anguish of the soul. Keats speaks ofyew-berries which are  broadly speaking associated with mourning the moodof the stanza is joyless which mirrors the subject it speaks of.However, Keats describes the anguish as keen-sighted because thesufferer still feels and so still has the capacity to feel happiness.The language used in Ode on Melancholy is highly appropriate  theclouds are weeping. Much of the effectiveness of this poem derivesfrom the concrete imagery. Throughout the poem, Keats yokes elements,which are ordinarily regarded as incompatible or as opposites. These...  ...e him unable to  key out it anymore and therefore feelanguish.In the end of Ode on Melancholy, we see the reward of the wakefulanguish of the soul. The possessor of the wakeful soul shall tastethe sadness of her might. The change of tense from present pleasureto future melanc   holy expresses their relationship  one is part of and needs follows the other. Keats concludes that the wakeful soulwill be the trophy gained from melancholy. However, the trophies are set forth as cloudy, which has negative overtones keeping the museof the poem constant throughout. Keats explores his muses victimizationlanguage of both happiness and despondency. Each of these feelingscharacterise the poems and therefore the use of imagery is relevant.The language used enables Keats to convey his emotions and experiencesto the point where the reader can feel them too.                  
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