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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
이은아 (신라대학교)
저널정보
새한영어영문학회 새한영어영문학 새한영어영문학 제56권 제4호
발행연도
2014.11
수록면
97 - 117 (21page)

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초록· 키워드

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John Keats, one of the major second generation Romantic poets was aware that the limits found in the nature of life and reality would not be overcome by imagination. He recognized that the apocalyptic visions of Early Romantic poets were nothing but a fantasy. According to him, there is no eternal life, no eternal joy and nor eternal truth. Life reveals its meaning only when it is considered with death, as joy with sorrow and good with evil take on their whole meaning. This paper examines how Keats’s understanding of the limits of reality reveals itself in Endymion. On the surface, the poem narrates Endymion’s adventure to find Cynthia, goddess of the absolute beauty. A close look into it, however, leads its readers to see Endymion’s foolishness with which he fails to face the object of his love. Cynthia, concealed under the veil of idealization, is not “that completed form of all completeness.” In fact, she is a vague being that appears and disappears, escaping others’ grasp. Keats leads us to recognize that our belief in the completeness is only fantasy, by making us realize the limits of an idealized object. Our lives will be richer when we face the limits of our reality, although the recognition involves a painful experience.

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