¶ … John Keats The most widely respected source for the history of the English language, the Oxford English Dictionary, records as early as Chaucer in the fourteenth century a meaning for the word "star" used (as the OED puts it) "with reference to the pagan belief that the souls of illustrious persons after death appear as new stars in the heavens." This metaphor seemingly takes a long time to devolve to the contemporary usage which seemingly alludes to this classical tradition: the OED dates the earliest recorded usage of "star" to mean "a person of brilliant reputation or talents…one who is distinguished in some branch of art, industry, science, etc." To the 1820s (offering examples from 1824 and 1829). It is worth noting these derive just immediately after the astonishingly young death of poet John Keats in February of 1821. Keats, a working-class boy from London who began training as a doctor only to discover tuberculosis infections first in his brother (whom he nursed on his deathbed), then in himself (probably contracted from the brother). Keats had also ambitiously abandoned medical training in the prospect of a career in letters, which led to a substantial anxiety in his work about the idea of success. A letter to his brother George from 25 October 1818 (just days before his twenty-third birthday) complains of the hostile reviews his early work had received by saying: "This is a mere matter of the moment - I think I shall be among the English Poets after my death. Even as a Matter of present interest the attempt to crush me in the Quarterly has only brought me more into notice…" (Letters 151). Yet by this point Keats knew all too well that his own death, and the assessment of his career, would come sooner rather than later. I would like to look at three images of stars in Keats' poetry, which I believe are used in a way that mixes the classical and emerging contemporary meanings alluded to in the Oxford English Dictionary. These come from the sonnets "Bright Star" and "On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer," and also from the longer "Ode on Melancholy." I hope to show how the astronomical imagery that Keats uses is meant to be deliberately ambiguous: the sonnets depict a more traditionally classical use of stars as imagery,...
Ultimately I hope to show how this represents a deliberate change in Keats' use of the metaphor over time, and represents his own anxieties about poetic "stardom.""O Sylvan Wye! thou wanderer thro' the woods, / How often has my spirit turned to thee!" (http://www.uoregon.edu/~rbear/ballads.html) Now, the poet wishes to "transfer" the healing powers of nature that he himself has experienced to his sister. By stating."..Nature never did betray / the heart that loved her" (http://www.uoregon.edu/~rbear/ballads.html) Wordsworth assures his sister that she will also find peace in the middle of nature if she believes in the
Since the 1970s, the global retail clothing industry has experienced intense international competition and major shifts in the pattern of consumer demand. These pressures have had far-reaching implications for the clothing industry in the areas of pricing, design, quality, manufacturing processes and employment (Rath, 2002). According to this author, "In the 1970s, traditional manufacturers, particularly High Street retailers with their own manufacturing capacity, found themselves unable to compete with low
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