@article{oai:dwcla.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001052, author = {甲元, 洋子 and KOHMOTO, Yoko}, journal = {Asphodel}, month = {Jul}, note = {application/pdf, AN00000289-20100726-14, Shelley wrote "Adonais," a pastoral elegy for Keats in 1821. Many Keats' researchers and admirers regard this elegy as problematic. Keats and Shelley were never close, and Keats had made effort to always keep Shelley at a distance. But Shelley took the trouble to write an elegy for Keats in any case. Shelley viewed Keats' death as a golden opportunity to revenge himself on the critics who discounted his value. To emphasize the critics' savagery, Shelley makes Adonais (standing in for Keats) overly weak and sensitive. His compassion for Keats was rather irrelevant. Shelley's elegy gave birth to the fable that Keats was killed by criticism, leaving a distorted image of an effeminate Keats. "Adonais" is based on "the bower of Adonis" in Endymion Book II, which Shelley had read rather carefully three years before. The origin of Shelley's Adonais is in his distorted memory of a rather inexperienced and immature Keats., 論文}, pages = {14--29}, title = {有難迷惑 : 「アドネイース」("Adonais") を巡って}, volume = {45}, year = {2010}, yomi = {コウモト, ヨウコ} }