Isabella Flashcards
Synopsis
- a love story set in Florence between Isabella and Lorenzo (a young man working for her family)
- Isabella’s brothers are concerned only about family honour, so they murder Lorenzo and bury his body in the forest.
- Lorenzo appears to Isabella in a vision and tells her the story of what has happened to him.
- Isabella discovers the body, digs it up and cuts off the head, burying it in a pot which she plants with basil.
- Moistened by Isabella’s tears, the plant flourishes – but Isabella herself wastes away, consumed by grief.
- The brothers’ suspicions are aroused and they steal the pot. Their examination of its contents leads to the discovery of Lorenzo’s rotting head. Horrified, they flee from Florence
- Now deprived both of her lover and the pot of basil, Isabella goes mad and dies.
when was Isabella written?
March 1818
what is Isabella based on?
Giovanni Boccacios Decameron day 4 novel 5
Keats on isabella (+ source)
I shall persist in not publishing The pot of Basil- it is too smokeableThere is too much inexperience of life, and simplicity of knowledge in it … Isabella is what I should call were I a reviewer ‘A weak-sided Poem’ with an amusing sober-sadness about it…’ letter dated September 1819 to Richard Woodhouse
possible reasons that Keats believed that this poem was ‘smokeable’
he had recieved quite severe criticism for Edymion
what the original intention behind writing this poem?
originally intended for a volume of verse trabnslations from Boccacio that Keats and Reynolds projected but later abbandoned
form
Narrative Ballad using ottava rima rhyme scheme (8 line stanzas of iambic pentameter)
explanation for the anti-capitalist undertones in Isabella
Robert Owen (an enlightened manufacture) wrote letters to the examiner. they were printed by Leigh Hunt and attacked those who put profit above` their concern for human happiness
Hunt on capitalism
So completely has this country been spoiled by the appetite of money-getting… so badly that [one]… confunds industry with unceasing toil, leisure with idleness, and pleasure (which is a virtue) with vice