John Keats, a second-generation Romantic, is considered one of the most influential poets of all time. Although his work was far from sad or gloomy, Keats led a life filled with many tragedies. At the age of 8, Keats's father died, and only 6 years later his mother died of tuberculosis. After studying to be a doctor, Keats realized that his true passion was composing poetry and followed his dream, but due to another series of unfortunate events his brother died of tuberculosis and he was unable to marry his romantic love due to his health and financial situation. Fearing that his life was coming to an end, Keats spent much of his twenties writing many beautifully detailed poems in which he expressed numerous truths of the world, before dying of tuberculosis at the young age of 26. The death of John Keats was a great loss to the world. literary world, but his legacy partly lives on in his work “Ode on a Grecian Urn”. This poetic artwork uses the relationship to ancient Greece through multiple characters for the current situation, a rigid structure to convey confidence in its ideas, imagery of word choice and repetition to evoke emotion and set a tone, as well as contrast to highlight a theme in his work. .Through the title and literature it is assumed that the poem was based on ancient Greece. Obviously the subject is a "Greek urn", used in this sense as a form of artwork depicting a scene. Contributing to the ancient Greek style, Keats also uses anachronistic diction that makes the poem seem older than those of the same 1820 era. The situation is presented in two separate stories, that of the speaker's life and that of the urn. The poem is told in the eyes of the speaker and then we follow his emotions through… middle of paper… easy, Keats understood the idea of “CarpeDiem” and used his days wisely. His keen eye for beauty in detailed art, of all forms, now helps many others understand the true beauty of life "Beauty is truth, truth beauty", and now we know. Works Cited Bai, Dr. Ronnie. “Poetry Analysis: Ode on a Grecian Urn, by John Keats.” Elio (2010): n. page Network. 4 April 2011. .Lorcher, Trento. “An Analysis of John Keats's Ode on a Grecian Urn.” Bright hub. Noreen Gunnel, 07/31/10. Network. April 4, 2011. "Ode on a Greek Urn: Introduction." Poetry for students. Ed. Marie Rose Napierkowski. vol. 1. Detroit: Gale, 1998. eNotes.com. January 2006. April 4, 2011. .Shmoop Editorial Team. "Ode on a Grecian Urn." Shmoop.com. Shmoop University, Inc., 11 November 2008. Web. 03 April 2011.
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