3.8 Article

Of Poets, Dreamers, and Doctors: Keats as a 'Physician to All Men'

Journal

KEATS-SHELLEY REVIEW
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 66-70

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09524142.2023.2215065

Keywords

Dreaming; poetry; medicine; identity; pain; imagination

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This essay explores the complex relationship between prophecies, poems, and dreams in Keats's poetry. Keats considers whether the dreaming imagination can alleviate the harsh realities of human life and reconcile ourselves to our situation. Through a close reading of key passages from Hyperion, the Odes, and 'Bright Star', Keats negotiates his conflicting notions of the poet as a healer for all and as a dreamer.
This essay explores some aspects of the complex relationship between prophecies, poems, and dreams in Keats's poetry. Keats often refers to the idea that poetry can alleviate the harsh realities of human life and reconcile ourselves to our situation. But can the poet rely on the dreaming imagination to achieve this effect? This essay engages in a close reading of central passages from Hyperion, the Odes and 'Bright Star' in which Keats negotiates his competing notions of the poet as 'a physician to all men' and 'a dreaming thing'.

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