The Sonnets of John Keats


Leído por Bruce Kachuk

The superb poetic skill and exquisite sensitivity of John Keats is brilliantly illustrated in this collection of meticulously selected sonnets. Keats had a passion for poetry as he had for life itself. His own life, although cut short at an early age, was one of creativity, productivity and one ornamented with immense poetic skill. His was a life that left an indelible mark of wonder on the world, an enduring legacy, a mark of greatness. Keats would write of his heroes, "How many bards gild the lapses of time!" - other poets and writers whose plight he often lamented, whose talent he always praised and whose loss, should it occur, he grieved. Keats would describe great artistry and the unsparing nature of time, "The gradual sand that through an hour-glass runs,- / A woodland rivulet,- a Poet's death." Indeed, Keats would draw his poetic inspiration not only from gifted poets but also from the magnificence of the natural world around him, "The poetry of earth is ceasing never."

Keats's sonnets resound with a search for meaning and, where none seems probable, create a compelling vision of what may be to come. In Keats's work we witness the poetry of fascination, of hope, of gratitude, of uncertainty and of entreaty, "But when I am consumed in the Fire, / Give me new Phoenix wings to fly at my desire."

These sonnets reflect the heart of a man enraptured, albeit the heart of a man too soon to sound its final beat. But until that fateful day we behold a heart strong and determined with the perennial uncertainty foremost in mind, "O Darkness! Darkness! ever must I moan, / To question Heaven and Hell and Heart in vain."
- Summary by Bruce Kachuk (1 hr 10 min)

Capítulos

Dedication of the Volume of 1817 to Leigh Hunt 1:14 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
O Chatterton! how very sad thy fate! 1:21 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Byron! how sweetly sad thy melody! 1:20 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Spenser! a jealous honourer of thine 1:15 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To My Brother George 1:20 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
As from the darkening gloom a silver dove 1:23 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Written on a Summer Evening 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To G. A. W. 1:10 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To -- 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To a Friend Who Sent Me some Roses 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
O Solitude! if I must with thee dwell 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Oh! how I love, on a fair summer's eve 1:24 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To a Young Lady who Sent Me a Laurel Crown 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Written on the Day that Mr. Leigh Hunt Left Prison 1:24 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Kosciusko 1:17 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
How many bards gild the lapses of time! 1:17 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On First Looking into Chapman's Homer 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Keen fitful gusts are whispering here and there 1:15 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Leaving Some Friends at an Early Hour 1:16 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Happy is England! I could be content 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To My Brothers 1:25 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On the Grasshopper and Cricket 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Addressed to Haydon 1:13 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Addressed to the Same 1:13 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
After dark vapours have oppress'd our plains 1:24 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Seeing the Elgin Marbles for the First Time 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Haydon (With the Foregoing) 1:12 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
When I have fears that I may cease to be 1:09 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Leigh Hunt's Poem, the "Story of Rimini" 1:13 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Written on a Blank Space at the End of Chaucer's Tale of "The Flowre and the Le… 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On a Picture of Leander 1:15 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On the Sea 1:21 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To the Nile 1:20 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Visiting the Tomb of Burns 1:26 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Written in Burns' Cottage 1:20 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Ailsa Rock 1:26 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Ben Nevis 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To one who has been long in city pent 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
The Human Seasons 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Written before Re-reading King Lear 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
From Ronsard, Fragment of a Sonnet 1:10 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Answer to a Sonnet by J. H. Reynolds 1:31 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Homer 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To John Hamilton Reynolds 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To a Lady Seen for a Few Moments at Vauxhall 1:12 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Sleep 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Fame 1:19 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
On Fame 1:20 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Why did I laugh to-night? No voice will tell 1:31 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
A Dream, after Reading Dante's Episode of Paolo and Francesca 1:30 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
If by dull rhymes our English must be chain'd 1:18 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone! 1:33 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
To Fanny 1:26 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
His Last Sonnet 1:24 Leído por Bruce Kachuk