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Keats Use Of Figurative Language

Decent Essays

In the poem “When I Have Fears That I May Cease to be,” John Keats reveals his overbearing fear of dying young. What if he never gets to feel the passions of true love? What if he never gets to write the mountains of books that he wishes to write? What if he never gets to experience the fame that he so desires? Fear of not being able to complete our goals before we die is a fear that lurks in the dark crevices of all of our minds. We must all find a way to fight this fear. Most people do it by blocking it out completely, but not Keats. Keats confronts his fear full force by announcing it to the public. Through the use of figurative language, such as repetition, imagery and personification, Keats leads us through a daunting journey of his greatest …show more content…

The fourteen-line, sonnet poem breaks into four obvious parts. Lines 1-4 are an exaggerated list of the reasons that Keats is afraid of dying young. In lines 5-6, Keats takes the time to “behold, upon the night's starr'd face” (V) the “huge cloudy symbols of a high romance” (VI). This point in the poem is light-hearted and reveals to the reader that Keats thinks on a different level than most humans. Lines 7-11 bring the reader back to the depressing list of reasons that Keats is so afraid of dying young. The turning point of the poem is in line 12. From line 1-11 Keats focuses almost completely on his own fears, but starting in line 12, he turns to the “wide world” (XIII), which is the key to all romantic …show more content…

Readers of Keats’s story begin to realize that the fear of a young death is a demon that haunts us all. This was Keats’s goal as a romantic writer: to connect with the reader, to portray his ideas in the form of art, and to make the reader see from his point of view. With his use of colorful figurative language, such as repetition, imagery, and personification, Keats accomplishes his goal. The reason that Keats is so successful in painting a clear picture is because he “uses his imagination to write” (King). By writing his poem in the form of a “Shakespearean sonnet consisting of three quatrains” (King), Keats, like any great artist, clearly states the point he is trying to make. Apprehension of a young demise is a plague that haunts us all. In “When I Have Fears That I May Cease to be,” Keats takes our hands and reassures us that we are not

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