Zusammenfassung der Ressource
La Belle Dame Sans
Merci - John Keats
- References
- The Garden of
Love
- She walks in
beauty
- Form and Structure
- Compressed lines using three
tetrameters followed by a final,
truncated line of only four or
five syllables
- This hastens the
poem's rhythm
- Uses quatrains of
alternating tetrameters
and trimeters
- This meter uses early
minstrel forms to create
a rolling, singsong pace
- The question and answer
from could be seen to
reflect early folk Ballads
- Majority of poem focuses
on the knights responses
to these questions
- Language Analysis, Techniques and Imagery
- O what can ail thee,
knight at arms
- Medieval settiing
- 'The sledge has
withered from the
lake/And no birds sing'
- Death imagery, gives
the poem a tragic tone
- 'So haggard and
so woe-begone'
- Knight is ill and
depressed
- 'Woe begone adds
to the medieval
atmosphere of
the poem
- Death Imagery
- 'Harvest is done'
- Shows it is Autumn-
often associated with
death
- fading rose
- Fding suggests illness
- 'I see a Lilly
on thy brow'
- 'Death-pale
- 'She looked at me
as she did love'/
And made sweet
moan
- Sexual
euphamism
- 'Light of foot'
- unpredicatable
- Graceful
and quick
- Supernatural imagery
- 'faerys song
- 'hair was long'
- Associated with temptresses
- 'Manna dew'
- 'wild'
- not to be trusted -
nymph like
- Themes
- Women and
femininity
- The supernatural
- Love
- Abandonment
- Typicality of Love Poetry
- Romantic poet so
typical conventions of
Romatics Poetry
- Nature Imagery
- speaks for the
marginalised
- The Supernatural
- Types of Love explored
- Obsessive
love
- Pastoral
love
- Abandoned
love
- One sided love