“——我的兄弟汤姆进步了很多——”:济慈书信和诗歌结尾的痛苦身体

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 POETRY
A. Barry
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本文通过关注济慈书信开头和结尾的框架部分对汤姆发烧身体的忽视,重新审视了其兄弟汤姆的疾病和死亡对济慈诗学的影响。虽然许多评论家试图从这些信件中抽象济慈的文学和哲学思想,但我在书信体结构中重述了他令人难忘的形而上学段落,这种结构不断回归对身体死亡的敏锐意识。我发现,这种结构模式也印在济慈在护理和哀悼汤姆时写的诗的结尾上,尤其是《圣艾格尼丝之夜》(1819年)、《夜莺颂》(181九年)和海伯利安计划的修订片段(1818-19年)。我认为,汤姆的身体出现在济慈文学作品的结尾,因为身体上的痛苦导致形而上学和浪漫主义的幻想——甚至沟通本身——动摇。然而,矛盾的是,汤姆的痛苦也是济慈写作的最初动机——这是他诗歌想象的起源和诗歌项目的结束。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘—My Brother Tom is Much Improved—’: The Suffering Body at the Ends of Keats’s Letters and Poems
ABSTRACT This article re-examines the impact on Keats’s poetics of his brother Tom’s illness and death by paying attention to the disregarded references to Tom’s feverish body in the framing sections at the beginning and ends of Keats’s letters. While many critics have sought to abstract from these letters Keats’s literary and philosophical ideas, I resituate his memorable metaphysical passages within an epistolary structure that continually returns to an acute awareness of physical mortality. I show that this structural pattern also imprints on the endings of the poems Keats wrote while nursing and mourning Tom, especially The Eve of St. Agnes (1819), ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ (1819), and the revised fragment of the Hyperion project (1818–19). I argue that Tom’s body emerges at the end of Keats’s literary productions because physical suffering is what causes metaphysical and romantic fantasy – and even communication itself – to falter. However, Tom’s suffering is also, paradoxically, what motivates Keats’s to write in the first place – it is the origin of his poetic imagination and the conclusion of his poetic project.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: The Keats-Shelley Review has been published by the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association for almost 100 years. It has a unique identity and broad appeal, embracing Romanticism, English Literature and Anglo-Italian relations. A diverse range of items are published within the Review, including notes, prize-winning essays and contemporary poetry of the highest quality, around a core of peer-reviewed academic articles, essays and reviews. The editor, Professor Nicholas Roe, along with the newly established editorial board, seeks to develop the depth and quality of the contributions, whilst retaining the Review’s distinctive and accessible nature.
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