Comparison Of Bright Star By John Keats

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John Keats’ poem, “Bright Star”, and Robert Frost’s poem, “Choose Something Like a Star” are compared and contrasted; both poems have similar themes, but very different styles, which can be seen through the poets’ calm and serious tone and the type of persuasion that each poet uses. Both poems are related, but not the same and although they have similarities they have entirely different meanings from each other. Keats and Frost use wishful and serious tones to show the the theme and style of their poem. Keats writes, “And watching, with eternal lids apart, Like patient, sleepless Eremite,
The moving waters at their priestlike task” (Keats 3-5). This quote shows the reader that the tone for the poem is serious; Eremite and priestlike are both …show more content…

This quote shows us that Frost’s poem is serious and straight to the point. He does describe the the water as moving and priest as steadfast, but he is more interested in properly …show more content…

Keats writes, “No--yet still stedfast, still unchangeable,
Pillow’d upon my fair love’s ripening breast,
To feel for ever its soft fall and swell” (Keats 9-11). This quote shows us that up until a certain point the speaker wanted to be like star because they are loyal and everlasting and unchanging. Around line nine is when the change in perspective and thought changes. The speaker now realizes that although being a star is good, it is not great. When you are a star you are stuck up in the sky and you do not get to be a part of everything on earth. It is better to be yourself. The speaker says, “We may choose something like a star 
To stay our minds on and be staid” (Frost 24-25). This quote shows that the speaker is encouraging the reader to be like a star. It is encouraging the reader to communicate with nature and open yourself up to nature’s secret. If everything is crazy and getting to be too much to handle, be like a star and become steady and unchanging. These two poems have a similar theme, but their meanings are completely different. Keats believes we should not be like stars, and Frost believes we should be more like

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