Home > Bright Star! Would I Were as Steadfast as Thou Art Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Brightest Star, Sweet Unrest: Image and Consolation in Wordsworth

Bright Star! Would I Were as Steadfast as Thou Art | Brightest Star, Sweet Unrest: Image and Consolation in Wordsworth

In this excerpt, Roe argues that Keats’s sonnet, although written to his beloved, is more than just a love poem. Rather, it contains the author’s central themes of beauty and mortality.

... For Wordsworth as for Shelley, the star is a radiant emblem of imagination as the translated expression of political ideals. For Wordsworth and Shelley, too, the star was explicitly associated with Milton's political constancy, the lack of which Shelley "alone deplored" in Wordsworth. I want now to return to Keats, and offer a reading of one of his best-known sonnets that will draw upon the political and literary context that I've been exploring so far:

Bright star! Would I were steadfast as thou art—
Not in lone splendour hung aloft the night
And...

[The entire page is 1603 words long]

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