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Rating:  Summary: Keats rivals Wordsworth as the greatest Romantic poet Review: ...and he rivals Shakespeare as the most perfect lyrical poet, the most exquisite shaper of words. Passages in the Odes (Melancholy is my favorite) are about as good as this language can expect to get, at least from a descriptive and sensual standpoint. Keats doesn't achieve the meditative transcendence of Wordsworth, but he has his own meditations -- usually more modest in scope, but made noble by the perfection of their expression.
Rating:  Summary: Everyone should read this book! Review: All of the poems, each crisply annotated, and a fine introduction to Keats and the analysis of his works.
Rating:  Summary: Keats can be dangerous, you know. Review: If you're sitting on a ledge overlooking a lush green valley on a gorgeous spring day, and you're reading Endymion, or Ode to a Nightingale, or The Eve of St Agnes, you could very well be so overwhelmed by the magnificence of creation that, without giving it a moment's thought, you would consign yourself to the breathtaking blue, to try to be one with it all, and because you've reached the absolute pinnacle of existence. How could you possibly top that?*ahem* This edition isn't annotated as well as it might be, but who cares? The poems are all there, and they're as heartbreakingly beautiful as ever. How can you--in all honesty--claim to have lived without having read Keats?
Rating:  Summary: The definitive edition of the poetry of Keats. Review: Jack Stillinger devoted much of his professional life to establishing the definitive texts of Keats's poems. This painstaking work has resulted in a number of changes to the poems. As to the quality of the poetry itself, at his best Keats approaches Shakespeare, as in the Odes. Stillinger is also an excellent teacher; I had his course on Keats 26 years ago, and it was fascinating. While the other reviewers have done a very good job of describing the beauty of Keats's poetry, one point Stillinger made about Keats as a person is worth repeating: Keats was the one English romantic poet that you would want to ask for advice about a personal problem you had. All the rest, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley (especially!), and Byron would have given you advice that, if followed, would have been wildly impractical. Keats, as shown by his letters, was not pretentious and had a large degree of human decency and common sense. While these characteristics are not one usually associated with romantic poets, I think that they contribute to the strength of his poetry.
Rating:  Summary: The definitive edition of the poetry of Keats. Review: Jack Stillinger devoted much of his professional life to establishing the definitive texts of Keats's poems. This painstaking work has resulted in a number of changes to the poems. As to the quality of the poetry itself, at his best Keats approaches Shakespeare, as in the Odes. Stillinger is also an excellent teacher; I had his course on Keats 26 years ago, and it was fascinating. While the other reviewers have done a very good job of describing the beauty of Keats's poetry, one point Stillinger made about Keats as a person is worth repeating: Keats was the one English romantic poet that you would want to ask for advice about a personal problem you had. All the rest, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley (especially!), and Byron would have given you advice that, if followed, would have been wildly impractical. Keats, as shown by his letters, was not pretentious and had a large degree of human decency and common sense. While these characteristics are not one usually associated with romantic poets, I think that they contribute to the strength of his poetry.
Rating:  Summary: Essential Review: No personal library can be complete without at least a sampling of Keats, and this is the book that everyone should get. All the poems -- even the fragments -- are here, with line numbers included. The several appendices and letter excerpts make the collection even more valuable. If you are trying to decide which Keats collection to get, you have found the best.
Rating:  Summary: Essential Review: No personal library can be complete without at least a sampling of Keats, and this is the book that everyone should get. All the poems -- even the fragments -- are here, with line numbers included. The several appendices and letter excerpts make the collection even more valuable. If you are trying to decide which Keats collection to get, you have found the best.
Rating:  Summary: The greatness of Keats Review: One of the most musical of the great poets, whose language has a richness next to Shakespeare's, a most romantic soul whose annus mirabilis 1819 brought forth the five great odes, the tremendous long lines still memorable, Beauty is truth/Truth is Beauty' That is all ye know on earth And all ye need to know/ the pain of beauty or the beauty in pain in the nightingale's song, the lyric of the Grecian urn, the dying at twenty-six ' his name writ in water', much had he travelled in realms of gold, the great letters of negative capability, the ostler's son in a surgeon's hospital , Fanny Brawne, the alien corn of Ruth, all the music which would one day be heard again in the lines of Wallace Stevens, the complexity of beauty dying , hearing more than one voice as the page echoes on, one of the poets' poets surely , upon a peak in Darien, like all the great masters he only gains in rereading.
Rating:  Summary: "...exceptionally keen sensitivity... " Review: There are two editions of Keats's Complete Poems which I admire very much. This one edited by Jack Stillinger and published by The Belknap Press of Harvard University (ISBN: 0674154312) and the Penguin Classics, 3rd edition, edited by John Barnard (ISBN: 0140422102). I very much like the fuller notes and 6 Appendices and the blunt, full, but suggestive chronology in the Penguin, along with the complete writing and publishing information fully written out rather than abbreviated into initials one might have to look up.
The importance of Jack Stillinger to Keats studies is cited by both John Barnard (Penguin classics edition of -The Complete Poems-) and Elizabeth Cook (Oxford World's Classics edition of -The Major Poems-, ISBN: 0192840630). John Barnard says in his "Introduction": "Jack Stillinger's -The Poems of John Keats- (Cambridge, Mass., 1978) and his -The Text of John Keats- (Cambridge, Mass., 1974) now give the fullest available account of Keats's text, and are based on a comparision of the printed texts with the wealth of manuscript material, now mainly in American libraries." And this edition compiled and edited by Jack Stillinger has it glories, too. The first of these is the excellent "Introduction," which has meaningful insights in it concerning Keats, but which can also be related to one's own experiences in life, though Stillinger does not himself so relate them. A few of these I like very much are: "Obviously Keats had an exceptionally keen sensitivity to the minute particulars of objects, sounds (as well as various shades of silence), and motions in the world around him." *** "He nursed his brother Tom in a lengthy illness that ended in death on December 1st of this year [1818], and as an added complication he met and fell in love with Fanny Brawne. More than anything else, I think, it is this combined experience of suffering, death, and love all at once, against a background of serious conversation, reading, and thinking, that accounts for Keats's sudden rise to excellence in his poetry." There is no way, of course, to share Keats's poetry in a review of this sort. To read it, experience it, think about it, and realize the Beauty -- and also the Truth -- in it is the reward. -- Robert Kilgore.
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