In his poem, "La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad," Keats does two things in particular that intrigue me. Firstly, he twists literary tropes that are traditionally meant to suggest femininity so that they instead suggest decay, or at least decline. Below is an image from Charles Berger's "The Extravagant Shepherd." The image is "a literal portrait of a beauty" using the actual metaphors that were popular for describing female beauty in the 17th century. The image shows just how silly some of these metaphors actually are if you think about them. In Keats' poem, though, he uses a "lily on thy brow" to describe the knight's anguish (9). This is a new way of using the old-school flower image that usually described a woman's pale, beautiful skin. Keats turns a flower trope on its head again in the stanza when he writes that "a fading rose" was withering on the knight's cheeks (11). While roses traditionally suggest love and robust beauty, here the rose is actually suggesting decay. Keats' use of the flower images in this third stanza (as well as throughout the rest of the poem) set up a link between this love story and natural growth. But, because Keats alters the trope, he seems to set up a new link within the initial setup; this new link is between obsession and decay.
The other part of this poem that caught my eye was the fact that the last line of each stanza is shorter than the others and quite definitive, too. This shift in meter draws attention to the final point in each stanza, so I tended to focus more on these than anything else. While the other details in the poem were pretty masterfully crafted and quite lovely to both see and hear, the last lines fell like a thud through this beautiful veil and hinted all along that danger was coming. Take, for example, the first three last lines: "And no birds sing," "And the harvest's done," and "Fast withereth too" (4, 8, 12). It is clear that peril is looming.
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
mortality/heaviness/clarity in "Marbles"
The first line ending—“mortality”—is the only
incomplete rhyme in the poem—it looks like “sky” or “die,” it sounds more like
“sleep” and “steep”---but it doesn’t fit completely with either, which feels
odd since the rest of the poem follows the rhyme scheme for a Petrarchan
sonnet. The “ee” sound the first line ends on, though, doesn’t feel out of
place; it is in “spirit,” “weak,” and “heavily” before we get to the “sleep” at
the end of the second line. Thus the not-quite rhyme between “mortality” and
“sleep” is evident immediately, drawing a clear distinction between what
mortality implies (death) and sleep—which is interesting because the speaker is
at the same time trying to compare mortality to an “unwilling sleep” (2). This
is really odd, too—first is the idea (and maybe this is because I’m tired, but.)
that any sleep would be “unwilling”—usually we sleep because we are tired, and
thus want to sleep. Also, waking up often implies a kind of epiphany, and you
would think that mortality would be
the epiphany—it seems that way for the speaker, at least. Still, he says that
mortality is the sleep—could one wake up and out of mortality, then?
The marble and the weak spirit create an immediate
contrast between heaviness and lightness. The weight of the mortality aligns
with the weight of the the marble. At first this feels a bit odd, because
mortality implies death while marble seems more permanent, but the image of the
marble wasting away is revealed at the end of the poem. This vision of
mortality suggests that the speaker sees himself as something that was once
great but will now die—it fits well with the image of the “sick eagle,” an
animal that was perhaps once as majestic as marble but, now sick, cannot fly. However,
it is the “imagined pinnacle and steep/Of godlike hardship” that “tells me I
must die”---perhaps the fact that it is “imagined” suggests that it is not
mortality itself, rather the speaker’s realization of his mortality that makes
his spirit weak, makes the sick eagle only look at the sky and not attempt to
fly.
(a line from Keats’s final letter feels like it
ties in: “I have an habitual feeling of my real life having past, and that I am
leading a posthumous existence” (p. 980)
I also remember him maybe comparing himself to an
eagle at one point in a letter? or maybe just mentioning an eagle? not sure)
The suggestion that the “glories of the brain” are
“dim-conceived” feels odd in a poem whose title has a focus on sight (“On
Seeing…”) and when the line before bears the image of “the opening of the
morning’s eye” (8). While the first eight lines focus on clarity and sight, the
dimness introduced in the second part creates greater uncertainty that
continues in the heart’s “undescribable feud”—and it is also in the final image
of the sun on the “billowy” ocean (13). The sun’s shadow is not only it’s
opposite in its lack of light---because it is reflected on the ocean it loses
another kind of clarity, that of shape, and becomes even more indistinct. The
syntax of the poem gets confusing for me here, too, and I think it fits well
with the blurring of the shadow. I’m still not sure if I completely understand
the last sentence of the poem, actually---the hyphens are hard to follow. I
didn’t connect it there at first, but is the last hyphen supposed to also call
us back to the beginning of the poem?--- “My spirit is too weak—…—a shadow of a
magnitude.” The speaker’s spirit is then the shadow of the marble. Marble is
(supposed to be, at least) distinct and clear cut—with “pinnacles” and steeps,
it represents an ideal, like the sun—unreacheable but that which we use to
model our world upon. The spirit, however, is something the speaker understands
less; he can’t make it as godlike or ideal as marble. Still, even the marble participates
in the “rude/Wasting of old time” (12-3), and it seems this loss/death of the
speaker’s ideal is what makes him lose hope for his own spirit. Or maybe the
loss is the fact that the ideal can only be represented by/in humans, and
therefore cannot last, or translate into anything that lasts, as even the sun
becomes an unclear shadow when it gets closer.
Monday, March 30, 2015
The Trials of Creation in "On Seeing Elgin Marbles"
“On Seeing the Elgin Marbles’ records Keats’ wonder at the Greek statues displayed in the British Museum in 1817. Within this wonder there is a deep solemnity within the artist, which seems to come from the experience itself and not from the speaker’s life outside this moment. This solemnity begins with physical pain born from metaphysical entities, as Keats says, “My spirit is too weak” (1) and “mortality/ Weighs heavily,” (1-2). There is an internal struggle which deals directly with Keats’ inescapable death, something that even at this early age hangs over him, creeping subtly closer. This feeling of death comes to the speaker “like unwilling sleep,” a characterization that suggests a fear not of death itself, but of the inability to control one’s existence. Keats as a poet seeks to create and the statues he faces represent “each imagined pinnacle and steep/ Of godlike hardship,” (3-4) that the process of creation brings with it. Keats sees his own fate in the statues, a life of slavery to creation. And his death as “a sick eagle looking at the sky,” (5) leaves him as the old king observing his former kingdom; the expanse of creation unfolds before him and he can do nothing but perish.
Later in the poem Keats find some relief, “‘tis a gentle luxury” (6), in his not having to create nature himself. In this way, Keats is elevating the status of the statues in front of him to the same as the creations of some Creator and raising himself to this comparison. Keats is witnessing the breadth of creation in his mind at the moment of the poem and equating it all, finding no difference in the creations of man and nature. And all creation forces the same pain to well inside him (9-10 11). But this pain is not inflicted, rather it is fostered by this experience. The pain is uniquely that of Keats and the artist, not one that is present in the sculptures themselves.
And what is most interesting, is the contents of this pain which “mingles Grecian grandeur with the rude/ Wasting of old time—with a billowy main—/ A sun—a shadow of magnitude.” (12-13). Inside, Keats experiences the physicalities of the sculptures “Grecian grandeur” alongside his own “[w]asting of old time” (13) which widens the disparity between his idealized creator-self and his currently perceived self. Mixed within this churning self-critique are more abstract entities like “a billowy main” (13), “A sun” (14), and the “shadow of a magnitude” (14). These first two aspects refer to the raw power of nature both in motion and stillness, the ocean “billowing” in its endlessly repetitive tides and the sun staring motionless at the earth day after day. So activity is removed as a cause of Keats’ pain, his feeling having to do with the inexorable power of creation both forces have. And the final “shadow of magnitude” (14) hints in some way to Keats’ vision of his own legacy, both foreboding and intangible. This shadow could even be that of the once-healthy eagle Keats compares himself to in line 5, his still-healthy wings creating majestic shadows on the countryside.
Thus Keats is left in internal turmoil pitting his need to create against his creations’ legacies. His future is a shadow, not a roadway or a river running, something definite in shape but unknowable in consequence.
The Absent Self Across Keats
What fascinates me about Keats always comes back to his “awkward
bow” with which he ends several letters, notably his last ever written (980). During
his life, and his “posthumous existence” Keats is “vassal” to not only Fanny
Brawne but also, and most importantly, to “the burden of the Mystery” (978, 971).
His uncertainty solely pledges allegiance to “the truth of Imagination” (965),
yet he knows he must exist in the world and of the world, a servant of “mammon”
(979). There is that awkward bow: it exists, but it is uncertain and lacking a
completeness. Who can really be totally certain about uncertainty? Keats
believes the true artist and/or those with a “complete disinterestedness of
mind” – the Shakespeare, the “seldom appearing Socrates” (974, 976) – dwell in “negative
capability,” which is “when a man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries,
doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact & reason” (968). How does
one begin performing this Kirkegaardian leap of faith into the abyss? Isn’t one
scared of the abyss “staring back,” to paraphrase Nietzsche?
To be truly uncertain, to perform the awkward bow, one must
almost be so self-conscious as to totally sublimate the self – to let the self move
among other selves, other forms. “If a Sparrow come before my Window,” Keats
writes in another letter. “I take part in its existence and pick about the
Gravel” (967). The dangerous zone of “no-self” is desired by Keats – to annihilate
the thinking “I” and flit, with sensation and feeling, from person to person,
object to object, animal to animal. This is Keats’ Poet, who is the most “unpoetical
thing” (973).
I object to Keats’ notion, which, in some ways, reminds me
of thinkers from Gandhi (his desire to be “zero”) to Roland Barthes (Death of
the Author). There is always the pen, but for it to exert force upon the page
there must be the pen-handler. “There now I think what with Poetry and Theology
you may thank your Stars that my pen is not very long winded,” Keats concludes
a letter to his brother and sister (977). The vassal, the filter, the
being-changer, the no-self self is still
in some way a self, a person, an identity. When one claims “no identity,” one
makes a liar out of the self – its an assertion of absence that is really a
presence. One advances a type of selfhood that sees the whole world teeming and
the eye through which the mass is understand as unimportant, awkward, an organ
that needs to bow out. Imagination, sleep – to Keats, these exist in the mind
but also on some higher plane, in the grand mystery that is both burdensome and
celebratory. The subject of self becomes absent, or at least un-speaking,
quiet, silent: “the simple imaginative Mind may have its rewards in the
repetition of its own silent Working coming continually on the spirit with a
fine suddenness” (966).
Here I’m unfairly conflating and combining Keats’ letters
across years and to various subjects. It would be better to consult the poems,
perhaps, for a “truer” sense of his vision and philosophy, if only because
those works were intended for a kind of public consumption and separation from
individual addressees. Two more notes from the Letters (for the Letters are really quite striking and
tremendous): “I am however young writing at random – straining at particles of
light in the midst of a great darkness – without knowing the bearing of any one
assertion of any one opinion” (975) and finally: “Do you not think I strive –
to know myself?” (975). Randomness is still a kind of direction; and the
knowledge of oneself may be a kind of throwing up of hands, a surrender, an
awkward bow: but it is a bow made by a person, not a shadow nor a ghost, nevertheless.
In the early poem “Sleep and Poetry,” Keats writes,
concerning sleep: “What is it? And to what shall I compare it?” (24). The
subject: the writer: the poet must compare “sleep” to something or he awkwardly bows out and compares it to nothing (or,
paradoxically, to everything). The poet desires complete loss of poetical “self,”
instead wanting to merely be the vessel or the continuously copying Monk of the
imagination’s Monastery (979). Keats notes that the flowers do not trot out their
identities; so should the poet also not? (969). Yet the poet must: for the poet
controls the pen. “O Poesy! for thee I hold my pen / That am not yet a glorious
denizen / Of thy wide heaven” (48-50) – this is a complaint of the poet, not a
description of “Poesy” nor sleep. The lack of metaphor, the complaint of “no
comparison” above in terms of “Sleep” is also a celebration of the self: it is
the poet who is described, his awkwardness and fumbling, not sleep itself. This
poet-subject, even in absence, desires “an eternal book / Whence I may copy
many a lovely saying / About the leaves, and flowers” (74-76). He wants to be
the Monk and surrender to the darkness and its small particles of light. Keats,
admittedly, for all his gestures toward surrendering the self and identifying
with that “Other I” claims: “I am continually running away from the subject” (966).
And running toward what? Perhaps a stable person: a body: a mouth that will
eventually heave blood.
For what is really about the Elgin Marbles in that poem? “My spirit is weak –
mortality / Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep” (1-2) – the poet’s
weakness (thus the poet) is the subject, and that becomes a way of describing
the “dizzy pain” of “these wonders” (11). Nor do we really understand what about Chapman’s Homer in that poem is so exciting to Keats,
merely what the sensation of reading the translation does for him. He doesn’t even read
the poem – Keats “looks into” it, he has “seen” and “been,” he “breathes its
pure serene,” he “hears,” he becomes like “some watcher of the skies.” Every
other sense seems to shine except that of understanding. For Keats, this is
perhaps not a problem. After all, “with a great poet the sense of Beauty
overcomes every other consideration” (968). The beautiful Vision is important;
the understanding is not, for it can never come, at least not in a way that
will stay fixed.
Then we run back into the arms of “Sleep and Poetry,” where,
with a bit more lines and wiggle room than the sonnets, we arrive at the point
where: “The visions are all fled … and
in their stead / A sense of real things comes doubly strong” (155-157). What is
the “real” to Keats? Is it that which gives only pain and not passion, nor a
mixture of the two? Does the real destroy “negative capability”? Is there no
great mystery that burdens in the “real things”? Is it different from that “dizzy
pain”? Is this, finally, what one makes an awkward bow to – not the vision, the
uncertainty, but the sense of waking to discover reality, like with Adam, the
real Eve beside? (966).
The Simplicity of Keats' Similes
Keats’ “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer” is fairly straightforward
and self-explanatory: it is a poem about poetry. It is a simplistic approach to
the appreciation of poetry that is reminiscent of previous poets “change the
world” mentality that we have seen before. The speaker begins the poem by
stating that he has traveled the world and seen the “realms of gold” (1). He
sets the precedence that few things can surprise or amaze him. While these
lines may be beautiful, the intrigue of the poem begins on line 9 and is
condensed in two similes.
“Then felt I like some watcher of the skies/ When a new
planet swims into his ken” (9-10). The first simile compares the speaker of the
poem to an astronomer – hearing Chapman’s understanding of Homer is essentially
an exploration or discovery.
“Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes/ He star’d at the
Pacific – and all his men/ Look’d at each other in wild surmise -- / Silent,
upon a peak in Darien” (11-14). Again, this second simile compares the hearing
of Chapman’s translation to a discovery of something unknown.
The emphasis on words such as “new” (10) and the description
of first sightings is an interesting comparison to the speaker’s situation
because he makes it clear that he actually has
heard Homer before yet has never “breathe[d] its pure serene” until Chapman
spoke of it out loud. This indicates the power that poetry has to change – or the
power for the familiar to become novel again. This act of appreciation then
becomes an act of passivity. In both similes the speaker is a “watcher,” (9) “star’d,”
(12) “look’d,” (13) and finally is “silent” (14). This stands in stark contrast
to Chapman’s “speak[ing] out loud and bold” (8). Keats seems to be playing with
the idea of poetry as passive versus active – as if both experiences exist in
the reading of poetry: the active interpretation of the poem, the translation
and analysis, as well as the passive enjoyment and discovery that the speaker is
experiencing in the poem. If this is the case, it presents a fun and ironic
presentation of the poem in which the speaker is both enjoying the poetry of
Homer, yet simultaneously actively presenting the reader with his own poem. In
addition, the poem presents the idea that those on the passive side are
literally left speechless and perhaps are not capable of doing anything besides
existing in isolation and appreciating in silence.
Keats on Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey"
In John Keats' letter to John Hamilton Reynolds on May 3, 1818, Keats has brings up an idea that made me think of Tintern Abbey in a different way. (970 - 972).
In Keats's letter, he makes a metaphor which compares the Chambers of a mansion to the different steps of life. He describes the first part of our life, or our childhood, as one without any of our opinions or thoughts until we reach another part of our childhood, "The Chamber of Maiden Thought". This chamber starts out as being filled with light and wonder but as we get older and time passes, the doors within the chamber are all opened and we are surrounded by dark passages and mystery. Keats felts that Tintern Abbey was Wordworth's exploration of these dark passages.
Upon reading this, I decided to take another look at Tintern Abbey. The poem describes Wordsworth's return to a landscape he knew as a child. While describing it, he thinks of instances in his life when he was feeling alone or low and how the thought of the nature scene lifted him up. To Keats, Wordsworth was using the idealist views of the natural world that he felt as a child, though naive, to get him through the loss of wonder that comes with adulthood.
"But oft, in lonely rooms, and 'mid the din / Of towns and cities, I have owed to them / In hours of weariness, sensations sweet" (25 - 27).
"how oft - / In darkness and amid the many shapes / Of joyless daylight; when the fretful stir / Unprofitable, and the fever of the world, / Have hung upon the beating of my heart / How oft, in spirit, have I turned to thee, / O sylvan Wye!" (50 - 55).
When first visiting Tintern Abbey as a child, he idealized the scene unknowingly. Then as he grew up and started to come to face the evils of the world or the dark passages that Keats mentions, he thinks fondly of the idealism of his childhood, or the way of thinking that comes with the first Chamber in Keats's metaphor.
The Cultural Implications of “On Seeing the Elgin Marbles”
The “Elgin Marbles” in the title of
Keats’s poem refer to a series of Parthenon objects that were relocated from
their original place atop the ancient temple to the British Museum by Lord
Elgin in the early 1800s (Ward). In the
two centuries since Elgin removed the figures from the Parthenon, controversy
has erupted over whether the museum should return these cultural artifacts to
Greece. Some Greeks believe that the
marbles should be restored to the Parthenon, being an invaluable part of
Greece’s cultural identity. By
demonstrating his existential experience in the presence of the Elgin Marbles,
Keats makes an implicit argument for their placement in the British
Museum. For example, Keats suggests that
the Marbles caused his recognition of his own mortality, which most likely
would not have been achieved otherwise.
Therefore, Keats implies that the Marbles are important to Britain’s
understanding of the impermanence of humanity, and can hold a place of
significance in the British Museum.
Keats denotes the Marbles as
appealing to human as opposed to a cultural sensibility, suggesting that they
can have a universal impact rather than one strictly related to Greek culture. The poem relates to the common experience of
all humans – that of the knowledge of one’s impending death. Keats describes how, “each imagined pinnacle
and steep / Of godlike hardship tells me I must die” (3-4). The fact that the each “pinnacle and steep”
is defined as representing an “imagined” vision of the might of Gods rather
than one that is “real” suggests that the Elgin Marbles are extraordinary as a
stimulus for the poet’s imagination rather than as objects themselves. Keats feels small and fragile in comparison
to the Marbles, referring to himself as a, “sick eagle looking at the sky” (5). The fact that he refers to himself as an
“eagle” suggests that he was once strong, but is now “sick” – aware of looming
death but not able to prevent it. In
expressing this sentiment, Keats successfully encapsulates the curse of
humanity – the idea one’s death is a self-fulfilling prophecy. In the first lines of “On Seeing the Elgin
Marbles,” Keats demonstrates the disarming effect of the Elgin Marbles, for the
objects cause the poet to realize his stead in the world.
The poem does suggest the “Grecian
grandeur” (12) of the Marbles, specifically connecting the objects to their
culture of origin. However, Keats
specifies that the, “rude / Wasting of time” (13) has spoiled the Marbles
rather than their removal from the Parthenon.
It is the effect of time that has caused a “dizzy pain” (11). This juxtaposition of pleasure and pain is
fitting with the contradictory nature of Keats’s poem. Despite the fact that Keats’s poem begins as
a lament, defining mortality as like an “unwilling sleep” (2), he soon views
mortality as a benefit. For example, he
states, “’tis a luxury to weep” (6).
Keats may evoke the specifically “Grecian grandeur” of the Elgin
Marbles, but the fact that he refers to the Marbles as being affected by time
(and by elements of nature – “A sun,” “A shadow of magnitude” (14)) emphasizes
that the objects have the universal quality of being transient. Therefore, Keats once again demonstrates how
the Marbles have a significance that transcends any cultural identity.
Keats does not directly confront the
issue of the cultural theft of the Elgin Marbles. However, in writing the poem demonstrating
the effect of the objects on visitors to the British Museum, he is
participating in it. Keats stresses that the impact of the Elgin
Marbles is not muted by their separation from the Parthenon or from
Greece. Therefore, Keats’ poem can be
viewed as an argument that the Elgin Marbles belong not to any country, but to
the world.
Works Cited
Ward, Victoria. "Why Are the Elgin Marbles
so Controversial – and Everything Else You Need to Know." The
Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group, n.d. Web. 30 Mar. 2015.
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