P. B. Shelly said it. His statement was "Keats was a Greek."
John Clare, 1793-1864, the English poet from Northamptonshire, wrote, "An ancient Latin proverb, POETA NASCITUR, NON FIT, means, "A poet is born, not made." Aristotle, around 350 B.C., said something similar in the RHETORIC: "Metaphor, moreover, gives style clearness, charm, and distinction as nothing else can: and it is not a thing whose use can be taught by one man to another" (translated by W. Rhys Roberts. Book III. Part 2).
David is John's nephew.
John Proctor.
Noplace. This is not a quote from Romeo and Juliet. It was said by the Roman poet Sextus Propertius.
Brutus didn't say that. Casca didn't say that, even. Can you not tell the difference between "it was Greek to you" and "it was Greek to me"?Casca is reporting what went on while Brutus and Cassius were talking. He says that Cicero made a speech in Greek, "but for my part, it was Greek to me." Casca means he doesn't speak Greek so he didn't understand any of it. The expression "it was Greek to me" (NEVER "it was Greek to you.") means "I didn't understand a word of it."
A Thing of Beauty is a Joy Forever by John Keats.
This Quote is said by John Keats (English Romantic Poet. 1795-1821)
John Keats is the person the quote "A thing of beauty is a joy forever" is attributed to.
John Keats was the man who said "Beauty is truth, truth beauty."
Thespis
Greek Poet Homer
Homer is a legendary ancient Greek epic poet, traditionally said to be the author of the epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey.
John Milton, Poet from the 17th Century
It was only said he was blind.
Which Homer do you refer to? Homer, greek poet, is quoted with saying "The will of Zeus is accomplished" Homer Simpson said "D'oh"
This was first recorded by Greek poet Sappho around 600BC, and the first English recorded use was in 1711.
John Keats--when referring to Shakespeare--I believe he called it negative capability. He indicated that all substantive writers need this ability.