Answer these questions with reference to the context.
1. All the world is a tapestry, I'm woven in with you
All the world is a restless sea, I'm just a wave like you.
What does the poet mean when he calls the world a tapestry?
b. How is the poet woven in the tapestry?
C. What does the poet mean when he says the world is restless sea?
d. Why do you think the poet compares himself with a wave?
Answers
Answer:
Although he is now recognised as a part of the British Romantic literary tradition, Keats was not known as one of the major Romantic poets during his lifetime, and he frequently felt uncomfortable around them. The generally conservative reviewers of the day attacked his work as mawkish and bad-mannered, the creation of a young, "vulgar Cockney poetaster," according to John Gibson Lockhart, and as containing "the most incongruous ideas in the most uncouth language," outside of his friend Leigh Hunt's circle of liberal intellectuals (John Wilson Croker). Keats did not have a formal literary education, despite receiving a liberal arts education at the boy's academy in Enfield and training as a surgeon at Guy's Hospital. However, Keats is now regarded as one of the funniest readers,
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