f age and spirit.    Much of this poem is a test of Keats inner soul or spirit.  He has   lead himself to St. Agnes for his own personal account of life in a   time long gone.  Keats' romantic style has brought visionary raw   emotion to the aching hearts of all his readers.  Then, both poems go   separate ways in their tales of body and spirit.          Taking account of all differences in these two works, has   brought out a sense of unknown extasy.  Pope displays morality with   his own twists on fate and man kind's inability to rationalize right   decision making in life.  He complicates this with, "Moral   superiority"  and his visions of old styles blended with his attitude   for recognition.  Pope has indulged the reader in consistent religious   order, and awkward justice for mankind.  However, when viewing Keats   poem stanza by stanza, much is revealed.  Keats' tale starts as a   direct eagerness for future considerations.  His image of love and old   age creates a stifled knot in the stomach of the reader.  Enthusiastic   resistance is overcome by Keats smooth flow, and harmonizing beauty in   heaven.  Angels and death are brought together like osmosis.  His   ability to start off in a cold bitter atmosphere of regret, and then   sway the reader's emotion to a peaceful loving atmosphere is in itself   astonishing.  Desire brings Keats to the heightened point of emotional   gratification within, "The Eve of St. Agnes."  St. Agnes is such a   peaceful age-old memory for Keats.  He presents strength when pain is   being inflicted.  His early images of purgatory, show Keats in a bind   of human emotion and regret for past sins.  However, Pope does this      as well throughout, "The Rape of Lock."  Although, Pope is less   likely to find a happy medium in his tale of tolerance.  He does   manage to relinquish all his desires for the sake of his own inner   strength.  This strength is portrayed more intensely through his soul.    M...