Literature Review

Showing posts with label John Keats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Keats. Show all posts

Romantic Literature : John Keats and his Mythology


   Assignment
Topic :
John Keats and his Mythology
                    
  Paper : 3
   Romantic Literature 

Name :  Ravina Parmar
Roll no : 19
SEM : M.A. sem- 2
Batch year : (2019-2021)
Email :ravinaparmar827@gmail.com
Enrollment no : 2069108420200031
 Submitted to : Smt. S. B. Gardi English Department Bhavnagar


  • John Keats and his Mythology : 
- ( Ode to a Nightingale)
- ( Ode to Psyche )


Introduction :
                     
                  John Keats used Greek mythology in his Odes. Normally the question was raised in my mind why John Keats used mythical elements in his odes ?  How does mythology connect with his odes ? As we know that the Myth was used and transformed by its believer. As we have great mythical characters Rama and Krishna, and of course we have thousands of different stories about them. So here we discussed how Keats used myth in his famous odes.


                  Generally the myth is used to explain how things came to be, to teach lessons or values, to explain social or religious rituals, and to entertain, to give different kinds of messages. But Keats uses myth in a vastly different way. Let's see what is the meaning of "Mythology" according to merriam Webster dictionary :
                 An allegorical narrative and a body of myths: such as the myths dealing with the gods, demigods, and legendary heroes of a particular people. And also a branch of knowledge that deals with myth.


     So the main purpose of the assignment is how John Keats used myth in his odes, which way he portrayed, how he connected with his time and situations. He had used many mythical elements in various poems but here I am dealing with two poems that are Ode to Psyche and Ode to a Nightingale.


Introduction of Poet :






                     John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) belonged to the romantic age. He was the one of the main figures of second generation romantic poets. His poems were not generally well received by critics, during his lifetime but after his death he became a well known English poet. The poetry of Keats is characterised by sensual imagery, most notably in the series of odes. He died when Only 25 years old but he was known as one of the most remarkable in the history of literature.


His remarkable poetry :


No.
Poetry
1.
Volume of poems (1817)
2.
Lamia and other poems (1820)
3.
On a Grecian Urn
4.
Ode to a Nightingale
5.
To Autumn
6.
To Psyche


   Shelley, Byron, Keats and other romantic writer mythology become a new language for exploring religion and spiritual themes. And also  Harry Levin  notes that the three poets ( Byron,Keats and Shelley) 


" Are very near the center of Romantic, Hellenism in England ".
            
                So here I am discussing four poems and in which how and were Keats used myth. Let's see how John Keats writes his poetry through the use of myth.


Poem : Ode to a Nightingale 


                         This poem was first published in 1819. It is a kind of song. This poem is written in ten lines stanzas. Also that is different from other poems because this poem has a unique rhyming pattern. One thought suggests another and, in this way, the poem proceeds to a somewhat arbitrary conclusion. In this poem we find that human Morality and immortality of poetry symbolized by the Nightingale. And also in this poem 'Ode to a Nightingale' uses the birds music to contrast the Morality of humans with immorality of art.


In 'Ode to a Nightingale' we find that many mythical characters. John Keats relates his ideas and his feelings to the mythical characters. These mythical characters through he was putting beauty in his poem.


It is quite a long poem. In which Keats used the following myths and you can say mentioned these mythical characters:


The myth of Tereus, Philomela and Procne :





          Here in this poem we can connect the myth of Philomela. Philomela and Procne were the daughters of king Pandion. Procne was married to the king Tereus. Who was the son of Mars and the cruel God of war. But later on Tereus like younger sister Philomela. He wished that he had married her instead of Procne. And then He sent Procne away into a great forest and also he had cut her tongue. Then, he told Philomela that her sister was dead. But she could weave most wonderful pictures, and could embroider letters, and put them together to form a few simple words. She needed nothing more but spread her story. Then Philomela finds that these letters are from her sister. Then she helped her sister and at that time Tereus became more cruel.
Philomela and Procne ran as fast as they could but King Tereus was getting nearer and nearer. The gods' pity had changed them into birds, Philomela became a Nightingale.


         She hides away from other birds, and remained silent while they were singing. At night, when all was dark and still, she used to sing under the windows of the peasants, telling the story of her dumb sister's wrongs, and her own sorrow.


         So in this poem also we know that the Nightingale who sings a song in the dark night.


"Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forget
         What thou among the leaves hast never known,
The weariness, the fever, and the fret
         Here, where men sit and hear each other groan;"

             Philomela and Procne get freedom from Tereus like that  poet wants that type of freedom. He would like to disappear in forest like Nightingale.


'Darkling I listen; and, for many a time
         I have been half in love with easeful Death,'


As we know, Philomela and Procne got freedom from the cruel Tereus. As a human being dead within a second and have a new life as beautiful birds. So here the poet also wants to "Easeful Death", don't want to have a painful death.  He wished, he could die as easily and painlessly as he could fall asleep.


       In myth, the nightingale symbolizes immortality and freedom. This is an allusion to the myth of Philomela and her sister who were turned into birds in order to escape their captor and rapist.


The myth of Dryad :


In this poem 'ode to a Nightingale' we find that the Poetry lined like :


" That thou, light-winged Dryad of the trees "


Dryads are always female and usually inhabit oak. The myth of Hippocrene  that is also  included in this poem. Like the lines :


 ' O for a beaker full of the warm South,
         Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,
                With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,'


The Hippocrene was a fountain in Greek mythology that was sacred to the muses. It was supposed to bring poetic inspiration when a person drank the water from the fountain.


Myth of Bacchus,  he was the Roman God of wine. Bacchus was essentially a copy of the Greek god Dionysus. Here in this poem we got the beautiful Poetic imagination. Here the poet has rejected the wine for imaginative thinking. Keats wants to escape from life not by means of wine  but by a much more powerful agent of imagination.


Poem : Ode to Psyche :






      This poem was written in the year 1819. The whole poem is filled with Greek  symbols, characters, motifs and customs. The poem opens with an address to the Greek goddess Psyche.


O Goddess! hear these tuneless numbers,wrung By sweet enforcement and remembrance dear,
And pardon that thy secrets should be sung
         Even into thine own soft-conched ear:
Surely I dreamt to-day, or did I see
         The winged Psyche with awakene'd eyes?


So here we can see that in the starting of the poem we find that the description of goddess Psyche.


          Here we can see the similarity of the characters and situations between the myth of Psyche and the poem ' Ode to Psyche '. Let's see what is the myth of Psyche and Cupid. How Keats had portrayed in his poem.


              "Ode to Psyche" is  simply a song to love and the creative imagination; in the full context of the odes. The basis for the story of “Ode to Psyche” is a famous myth. 


                     Psyche was the youngest and most beautiful daughter of a king. It has been told and retold in several different versions and it has inspired artists all over the world. She was Nymph who attracted the love of Cupid but who left her. Because she makes him angry for her disobedience. She found her lover all over the Earth and had to carry out supernatural tasks. And then eventually Jupiter, at Cupid's entreaty, consented to their marriage and Psyche was brought to heaven. Let see the description of the poem :


" O latest born and loveliest vision far
         Of all Olympus' faded hierarchy!
Fairer than Phoebe's sapphire-region'd star,
         Or Vesper, amorous glow-worm of the sky;
Fairer than these, though temple thou hast none, "


               These lines through we know that she was the youngest, loveliest and most beautiful of all the Olympians gods and goddess. She has no temples like others. Here we can say that the poet constructs a perfect setting for Psyche to enjoy her divine immortality. 





" And there shall be for thee all soft delight
         That shadowy thought can win,
A bright torch, and a casement ope at night,
         To let the warm Love in! "


     So here he recalls the myth of Psyche meeting Cupid  in the dark but evoke a warning evening awaiting the entry of one's warm love. Not in a secret way but openly. That through the poet expresses his own feeling of being an immortal, he wants to become immortal. So here Keats uses sensual imagery to celebrate the creative power of the poetic imagination bto immortalise a goddess, who represented not just love but the way that love and the soul grows through desire, loss, suffering and reunion.


               And also we feel that the poem is like the temple of Psyche, to worship Psyche but also to immortalise her. Therefore the power of art itself. When we thought about, Why did this myth attract Keats ?  In a way all classical illusions are not connected with Poetic expression , But Keats tries to connect the poet's concerns with images and stories which had gathered in meaning over the centuries. And also this Yale clearly relates the keatsian concerns : Like the importance of love, idealised as an expression of emotional desire and sexual sensation. He tries to explain the value of suffering in any situation.
    
Conclusion : 


        Thus, John Keats beautifully used mythical elements in his poems. That through he talked about suffering, death, and wish to become immortal. He suffered from tuberculosis so unintentionally the fear of death comes out in between. His wish to live a long life that comes across. So he connects his situation with mythical characters and situations. And also Myths are sacred tales that explain the world and peoples experience. Myths are as relevant to us today as they were to the ancients. Myths answer timeless questions and serve as a compass to each generation. So in this way he expressed his situations through the myths. 


Cited work :


  • Geller, and Geller. “Dryad - Tree Spirit of Greek Mythology.” Mythology.net, 8 Apr. 2017, mythology.net/greek/greek-creatures/dryad/#.






  •      “Mythology.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Mythology. Accessed 5 Mar. 2020.

  • Myth of Philomela ***, m.talesbeyondbelief.com/myth-stories/philomela.htm.
                 

Thinking activity on John Keats

Hello readers !


This blog is a part of thinking activity. In our syllabus we have paper of romantic literature. In which we learnt about John Keats (1895-1821) and his poem like Ode to Nightingale, Ode to Autumn, Grecian Urn, Psyche. This thinking activity is given by Heenaba Zala. 


So in  this task we have to find out how death is generally dealt by other writers in literature. Normally people don't want to talk about Death. Even some of the people can't think about death because they feel fear. They can't eccept the reality . Generally most of the people considered death as mighty and dreadful. But if we look for a literature and then we find that poet or author have various thoughts on death. They showed us every side of the death that is good or bad.

"Death is not the opposite of life but a part of it "

Let's see how John Keats portrayed death in the poem Ode to Nightingale :

This poem is the quite a long poem, in which eight stanzas.

"Darkling, I listen and far many a time,
I have been in love with easeful Death,
Call'd him soft names in many a mused rhyme, 
To take into the air my quiet breath "


In this poem we find that he was tried to enter the life of Nightingale. He uses a strong symbolic meaning of the Nightingale and it's world to ascape from harsh reality. He uses imagery of Nightingale. If we look historically then we got the idea about how poet use this imagery in poem, Nightingale represent the freedom and inspiration. But here John Keats including many more things. He explore deepest creative expression and the mortality of human life. Keats focused on death and. It's in evitbilily in his work. For Keats small, slow acts of death occurred every day.

👉  Other poet's view on Death :





The famous poem " Death be not proud" is written by pioneer of Metaphysical poetry, John Donne. In which he came from very different perception about death. In this poem's title itself suggest that ' death don't be proud'. Here poet think totally different than John Keats. John Donne can say that confidently, that death has no courage of capacity to kill even him death is nothing more than permanent rest to bones and soul is delivered to a new body.


" For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow
Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me.....
And soonest our best men with thee do go,
Rest of their bones, and soul's delivery."

Here John Donne said that o poor death you can't kill me. Death is not a painful experience but this is the rest of the life. Our soul is Never died.

" One short sleep past, we wake eternally
And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die."

This lines through poet wants to say that death is nothing but a mere sleep in between man's earthly lives and the eternal after life. Death no more visit them. Donne proved death's powerlessness in the end of the poem. And also said that death is itself die not a man.  So poet's mean to say that those who dies is actually dead. And one more thing  is death is the pitiable figure like in this poem the word : " poor death".


'Because I could not stop for death' is a lyrical poem, first published posthumously in Poems : series 1 in 1890. Many of her poems deal with  the theme of the death and immortality. Her life's evidence through we can say that she lived much of her life in isolation. May be that's why she build friendly with death. If we look at in her life she was troubled from a young age by the ' deepening mence' of death and especially the death of those who were close to her.

In this poem Dickinson portrays death as her colleague in the carriage. We can't think of death and here death is the colleague.

Because I could not stop for Death –
He kindly stopped for me –
The Carriage held but just Ourselves –
And Immortality.

The second line is showing us that death kindly stop her personal. She said that the death is 'Kindly gentleman'. Here Dickinson try to give a human characteristic to the death.

"We slowly drove – He knew no haste
And I had put away
My labor and my leisure too,
For His Civility –"

How slowly they drove and death has no haste. And they visit various stages of life like childhood, the school and to her grave also. It seems she herself is already dead. What happen when people die?  every man ask this question to herself or himself. Here in this poem we find that the inevitability of death and the uncertainties that surround what happens when people actually die. Here we can say that how women think about the concept of Death.



Generally people don't want to talk about death but the poet who has fascinated by the death. 

Thank you......