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Ode On A Grecian Urn Critical Analysis PDF
Ode On A Grecian Urn Critical Analysis PDF
This ode is based on the tension between the 'ideal' and the 'real'. Keats here
imagines an urn as a symbol of the world of art which represents the ideal
world. Then he experiences that world created through his imagination. The
perfect, permanent and pleasurable world of the urn stands against the
destructive, corrupt and painful world of reality.
‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ is a well built poem in three parts: introduction, main
subject and conclusion. The first stanza gives the introduction; the second,
third and fourth stanzas describe the main subject, and the fifth stanza
presents the conclusion. The introduction describes the mystery of the urn
and shows what questions the images painted on the urn pose to the poet;
the main subject consists of the scenes on the urn as Keats sees them not
with his physical sight but with his imaginative sight. The conclusion answers
the question which the poet has raised in the first stanza. Thus in the words
of Graham Hough,
“The poem has what Aristotle would call a beginning, a middle and
an end.”
The ode begins with an apostrophe to the urn. Keats uses three metaphors to
personify the urn: “the unravished bride of quietness”, “the foster-
child of silence and slow time” and “sylvan historian”. In the rest of
the stanza, he meditates upon the pictures painted on the urn and raises
some questions to remove the ambiguity.
In the second stanza, the poet ceases his search after the identity of the
painted images and addresses them. To him,
Are sweeter,…”
because such music is lasting and permanent. Thus Keats shows supremacy
of art over life. Art has given permanence and immortality to the musician
and the lover painted on the urn. Keats is forced to think about the
superiority of Art over Nature. Art is permanent, while human life and its
sensuous beauty are transitory. Compton Rickett says,
“Human life and happiness may be brief; yet art has given them a
lasting durability, and so links the ages together.”
Here Keats refers to Fanny Brawne with whom his love remained unachieved.
In the fifth stanza, the Keats addresses the urn in a different way. He calls it
“Attic shape”, “Silent form” and “Cold pastoral”. In this way, the urn is
personified. It will remain unchanged for the future generations and will
continue to teach that beauty and truth are inseparable.
The central thought of this ode is the unity of truth and beauty. According to
Keats, beauty and truth are not separate things but two sides of one and the
same thing. What is beautiful must be true, and what is true must be
beautiful. The knowledge of this great fact is of supreme importance and this
fact represents the very essence of wisdom. Having this knowledge, mankind
needs no other knowledge. Keats has summed up his philosophy of life and
theory of art in these lines. But they have aroused much controversy among
the critics. T. S. Eliot even called this statement “a serious blemish on
this beautiful poem.”
To sum up, we may say that in ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’, Keats emphatically
points out the difference between art and life. Life, though real, is subject to
decay and death; art, though unreal, has permanence of beauty. However,
there is hidden pathos that runs throughout the poem and it remains a sad
poem. The urn is a ‘cold pastoral’; it has no warmth of human life. Nor can it
make any progress, because progress implies change. But the urn is beyond
any change. So the urn is deathless, but is also lifeless.
“I could not name any English poem of the same length which
contains so much beauty.”
This ode reveals the highest imaginative powers of the poet. It was inspired
by the song of a nightingale which the poet heard in the gardens of his
friend, Charles Brown. It is a spontaneous expression of Keats’ life. The poem
presents the picture of the tragedy of human life. It brings out an expression
of Keats' pessimism and dejection. He composed this poem in 1819 when his
family life was shattered at the time when his heart was full of sorrow. His
youngest brother Tom had died, the second one had gone to America and the
poet himself was suffering from Tuberculosis. At that time he was also in the
agony of his passionate love for Fanny Brawne. His financial condition was
unsecured. All these happenings had induced in the poet a mood of sorrow.
He could not suppress it. According to Douglas Bush,
It is a ‘richly meditative ode’ as Prof Hereford calls it. The central idea of
this poem is the contrast of the joy and beauty and permanence of the
nightingale’s song with the sorrows of human life and the transitoriness of
beauty and love in this world. The nightingale’s song in the poem symbolizes
the beauty of nature and art.
This mood is due to the rapturous song of the nightingale. But, the poet also
feels an acute pain because he is conscious of his mortality and suffering.
Being an escapist Keats wants to throw of the burden of self consciousness
and sinks gradually into the world of imagination. He desires for a beaker of
wine by drinking which he can forget this world of sorrows and misfortunes
and fade away into the forest where the nightingale is singing its joyous
song. The poet’s desire for wine does not mean a desire for warmth and
gaiety; it is a desire for escape from the world of realities.
“That I might drink, and leave the world unseen,
And with thee fade away into the forest dim.”
Finally, by the help of the poetic imagination, he makes himself able to fly in
the world of the nightingale. Next, we find the poet “half in love with
easeful death”. The thought of his own death makes him contrast the
mortality of human beings with the immortality of the nightingale. According
to Calvin,
“The poet contrasts the transitory of human life with the
permanence of the song of the bird”.
have a momentary flight into the fanciful world. But, ultimately one has to
return to the real world and must accept the reality. John Keats is no
exception to this. He makes imaginative flights into the ideal world but
accepts the realities of life. He wants to escape from the world of anxiety by
virtue of his imagination but he is fully aware of the fact that:
“The Fancy cannot cheat so well,
As she is famed to do, deceiving elf”.
The touch of the supernatural, the mystery, and above all the
suggestiveness of these lines have made them a test by which purely
romantic poetry can be judged and measured.
The poem is one of the finest examples of Keats’s pictorial quality and his
rich sensuousness. We have an abundance of rich, concrete, and sensuous
imagery. The lines in which the poet expresses a passionate desire for some
Provencal wine or the red wine from the fountain of the Muses have a rich
appeal.
“O, for a draught of vintage, that hath been
Cool’d a long age in the deep-delved earth,
Tasting of Flora and the country green,
Dance, and Provencal song, and sun-burnt mirth!”
Then there is the magnificent picture of the moon shining in the sky and
surrounded by stars, looking like a queen surrounded by her attendant
fairies.
“And haply the Queen-Moon is on her throne.
Cluster’d around by all her starry Fays.”
The rich feast of flowers that awaits us in the next stanza is one of the
outstanding beauties of the poem. Flowers, soft incense, the fruit trees, the
white hawthorn, the eglantine, the fast-fading violets, the coming musk-rose
full of sweet juice—all this is a delight for our senses.
To sum up, Keats soars high with his 'wings of poesy' into the world of ideas
and perfect happiness. But the next moment, consciousness makes him land
on the grounds of reality and he bids farewell to the ideal bird. At this
moment, Keats must also have been conscious that the very bird, which he
had idealized and immortalized, existed in the real world, mortal and
vulnerable to change and suffering like himself.
In both odes poet’s admiration is for the ideal world of art and nature. Things
carved on the Grecian urn are permanent and free from decay whereas
things of life are exposed to change and decay. The branches of the tree on
the urn will always remain green; the lovers will enjoy their present state; the
music will always remain enjoyable; the lover will always have his beloved
before his eyes and the beloved will never grow old. On the other hand
earthly things keep on changing. Earthly passions do not give satisfaction
and comfort to human being rather they leave a ‘heart high-sorrowful
and cloyed’. Those who nourish these passions get nothing but a ‘burning
forehead’, and a ‘parching tongue’.
If ‘Ode on Grecian Urn’ shows Poet’s admiration and yearning for the world of
art, ‘Ode to a Nightingale’ shows the same for the world of nature. Here once
more, the poet wants to escape in the world of nightingale which does not
know pain and suffering. The world of nightingale is free of fever and fret of
human world; in that world pain and groan are totally absent; things do not
grow old there; there is nothing like disease there; thought which makes
people sad and sorrowful is not present in there; frustration and
disappointment are nowhere in the world of nature; and love does not
change there. And just as in the “Ode on a Grecian Urn” Keats deepens the
significance of his poem by his contrasts between ideal beauty and actual
life, so in the “Ode to a Nightingale”.
Both of the odes are rich in the use of symbol. The central symbol of “Ode to
Nightingale” is Nightingale. On the other hand the main symbol of “Ode on a
Grecian Urn” is Urn. The Grecian Urn is the symbol of immorality of art.
Nightingale symbolizes happiness. As the poem progresses, the song of
Nightingale does not remain the song of a particular bird it becomes a
symbol of the eternal beauty for the poet. It is in this sense that the poet
cries out:
“Thou wast not born for death, immortal bird.”
Same is true in the case of the Urn. In “Ode on a Grecian Urn'’ the Urn is
personified. It stands for beauty and permanence. It contrasts with the
transitoriness of human life which is full of misery. The poet knows the value
of the Urn as a beautiful piece of art but at the same time he realizes that
beauty is not the only thing of importance. The Urn though immortal is
speechless. It lacks the warmth and vigor of life.
Keats expands the range of his sensuousness from pictures of physical love
to the pictures of natural beauties. In “Ode to a Nightingale” the poet looks
for eternal beauty. The beauty of the song of Nightingale is beautiful from
time immemorial. It delights all people in all ages everywhere. The Urn itself
is a symbol of everlasting beauty. The painter may die but the beauty of the
painting is everlasting. The poet may die but poetry is undying.
In all his poems, the poet is Greek in temper and spirit. He is a representative
of Greek thought and culture in a sense in which Wordsworth, Shelley,
Coleridge are not. In “Ode to a Nightingale” there are references of Dryad,
Hippocrene, Bacchus, Lethe- which remind us of Greek mythology. The Urn
itself is from Greek mythology. It immortalizes Greek joy, culture, religion.
The Grecian Urn shows the poet as the true representative of Greek, as the
Urn outlives Greek culture. The Urn is the beauty. It is as true as the Greek
immortality.
Both poems show that escape from the real world is never possible. In “Ode
to the Nightingale” it is the word “forlorn” that puts the clock black. In the
“Ode on a Grecian Urn” it is the realization of the death like warmthless
and speechless silence of the Urn that brings Keats back into the world of
reality.
Keats is called least romantic of all the romantic poets. He uses all the
elements of romantic poetry like imagination, escape, love of the past,
enjoyment of beauty, love of picturesque, sensuality, spontaneous
expression of feelings, experiment with form and theme, subjectivity,
depiction of nature, love of exotic, death wish, simplicity of language and
expression. Yet we find great care of a great classic poet in Keats’ poetry. His
balance is outstanding. Both odes carry all the qualities of classic art as well
as romantic art. It is this blend of romanticism and classicism which makes
Keats’s poetry of everlasting appeal. And this blend is nowhere so prominent
in Keats’ poetry as we find them in his great odes. This is the reason that
critics say that Keats’ odes were enough for his greatness.
Through the example of Coleridge, Keats himself has explained the meaning
of his statement.
The origin of the term is unknown, but some scholars have claimed that
Keats was influenced in his studies of medicine and chemistry, and that it
refers to the negative pole of an electric current which is passive and
receptive. In the same way that the negative pole receives the current from
the positive pole, the poet receives impulses from a world that is full of
mystery and doubt, which cannot be explained but which the poet can
translate into art.
Negative Capability is not just denying the need for correct answers, but
denying humanity’s ability to fully understand any kind of phenomena. In
other words, Keats says that for some things, those correct answers might
not be available. In fact, they might not exist at all. Keats was seen as
rejecting the Enlightenment’s attempts to rationalize nature, and by doing
so, he ended up at the forefront of the Romantic Movement.
Keats thinks that a poet is succeeded if he is able to share with his readers
what he has experienced. He should inspire the reader to such an extent that
the reader blindly starts following the poet and forgets his miseries. It is the
duty of the poet to remove his ego from his work. He says,
“A poet is the most unpoetical of anything because he has no
identity.”
This discussion on Keats’s Negative Capability can be concluded well with the
remarks of a critic, Allen Somervell:
“The excellence ofevery art is its intensity, capable of making all
disagreeables evaporate, from their being in close relationship with
beauty and truth.”
ESCAPISM OF KEATS
CONTRAST BETWEEN REALITY AND
IMAGINATION
CONTRAST BETWEEN ART AND REALITY
“Keats’ poetry puts man’s mind exactly where it should be – on a
delicate balance, below which it cannot descend; beyond where it
has no will to rise.” In the light of this statement, critically evaluate
Keats’s odes. (2005)
The sharp contrast between the desire for beauty and awareness of
pain makes Keats’ odes dramatic. Discuss. (2006)
How does the dramatic spirit express itself in the odes of Keats?
(2013)
Keats’ odes reflect his constraint vision. The poems show the poet
trying to resolve the conflict between happiness and melancholy,
flux and stasis, art and life, life and death with a brilliant artistic
force. (2013 Sup)
The odes of Keats deal basically with some of the conflicts and inner
struggles that troubled him. These conflicts give to his odes a dramatic
quality. The odes of Keats are dramatic in the sense that they arise from
certain basic conflicts and are based on certain contrasts. The chief conflict
is between the real world and the ideal world. They also imply the opposition
between pleasure and pain, imagination and reason, permanence and
transitoriness, Nature and the human beings, art and life, freedom and
bondage waking and dream. This sharp contrast between the desire for
beauty and awareness of pain makes Keats’ odes dramatic.
Keats is often called and ‘escapist’ because of his escaping tendency from
the real world to an imaginative world. When does Keats think of escaping
from the reality of his life? Is there any particular time? – Yes. Keats’ life-long
creed is ‘A thing of beauty is a joy for ever’ (Endymion). Unlike other
romantic poets, he does not make his poetry a vehicle of any prophecy or
message. It has no moral, political and social significance. The major
characteristic of his poetry is an unending pursuit of beauty. He had no
interest in the world outside. Stopford Brook says,
“Keats was so pre-occupied with beauty that he turned an blind eye
to the actualities of life around him.”
How does Keats escape from reality? What is his medium or transport? Keats’
own words give answer to these questions:
“Not charioted by Bacchus and his pards
But on the viewless wings of poesy.”
Keats’ escape is from his real life to an imaginative and ideal world. But why
is this escape? Because, according to Keats, reality of human life is full of
suffering, pain etc; this world is not a desirable place. ‘Ode to a Nightingale’
is an excellent example of Keats’ escapism in his poetry.
He has summed up his individual as well as common sufferings of life in the
following lines of stanza 11 of the poem ‘Ode to a Nightingale’:
“The weariness, the fever, and the fret
……………………………………………………..
Where palsy shakes a few, sad, last gray hairs
Where youth grows pale and spectre-thin and dies;
Where but to think is to be full of sorrow
…………………………………………………………
Where beauty can not keep her lustrous eyes.”
Here he considers that life is full of misery, sorrow and disease, of tiring
struggle, of restlessness and pain; that old men’s life is helpless and pitiful,
that even the young are dying of terrible disease; that beauty is short-lived;
that one’s love for another does not last long. Therefore, we see that Keats is
so disgusted with the real life that he always tries to escape from it. This is
the view of reality by Keats.
The word ‘forlorn’ reminds him his position in ‘the weariness, the fever
and the fret’, like the alarm clocks of our clocks that turn us from our
dreamy sleep to the world of bitter reality. He calls his imaginative escape
‘fancy’, ‘deceiving elf’. Keats is always trying to escape to the world of
imagination, the world of beauty and perfection, such as, the world of the
Keats’ odes reflect his constraint vision. The poems show his trying to resolve
the conflict between happiness and melancholy, flux and stasis, art and life,
life and death with a brilliant artistic force. The Grecian Urn as a piece of
Greek art, very much like the Nightingale, has a monumental value. It is
immortal because it is a substitute for the miserable world of reality. The Urn
will always give this message to man, “Beauty is truth – truth beauty.”
Keats knows the limitation of his imaginative escape to world of things like
the Urn or the Nightingale. He realizes that the speechless Urn will remain
‘forlorn’ like the Nightingale. Thus he comes back on the hard crust of earth
on which every man lives.
To conclude, we can claim unhesitatingly that Keats, after escaping into the
world of beauty and permanence, finds himself compelled to return to the
real world of impermanence and suffering. He derives the conclusion that
true beauty consists not in an escape from this world but in an acceptance of
it. We can sum up this discussion with the concise statement of a critic:
“Keats’ poetry puts man’s mind exactly where it should be – on a
delicate balance, below which it cannot descend; beyond where it
has no will to rise.”
Keats is not only a pure poet but a pure romantic as well. As a romantic poet,
he was greatly inspired by the Greek art and culture. He was also inspired by
the Elizabethans, especially Spenser. Keats is a true romantic poet and
makes poetry an instrument for the expression of his personal and emotional
feelings. His poetry has no didacticism (moral teachings) like Wordsworth
neither it has revolutionist approach like Shelley. Riddley Scott says,
“Keats feels the impression of beauty on his pulses and breathes it
into poetry.”
As a pure poet, the dominant theme of all Keats’ poems is beauty. Unlike the
other romantic poets of his age, he did not take notice of the social, political
and literary turmoil but devoted himself entirely to the worship of beauty. He
himself says,
“With a great poet, the sense of beauty overcomes every other
consideration.”
A pure poet feels and expresses his joy in beauty, but when he feels this joy,
he realizes also a new aspect of beauty, which is truth. In this identity of
beauty and truth, lies the harmony of universe. Keats realizes this harmony
when he says;
“Beauty is truth, truth beauty - that’s all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”
Love for nature is the chief characteristic of all the romantic and pure poets.
Keats also loves nature but he loves nature for the sake of nature. He does
not give any theory or ideology about nature. He only admires the beauty of
nature. But on the other hand, Wordsworth spiritualizes nature, Coleridge
finds some supernatural elements in nature, Shelley intellectualizes nature
and Byron is interested in the vigorous aspects of nature.
Keats was a pure poet as he does not project any theory in his poetry. He
believes in Negative Capability. Negative Capability is the willingness to
embrace uncertainty, live with mystery, and make peace with
ambiguity. Keats wants to accept the every aspect of world from
disappointment and disgust to exaltation and serenity. So most of Keats’
poetry is devoted to love, pathos, disappointment in love, and loss of beauty
and joy. Where is then beauty in life? Actually he realizes the truth of life
after passing through his agonies. Pain and suffering cannot be divorced from
joy as they together make up life just like day and night together make up
time.
“Wordsworth and Shelley both had theories but Keats has none. We
cannot accuse Keats of any withdrawal or refusal; he was merely
about his business and his business was that of a pure poet.”
A very significant element which one finds in Keats’ poetry, and in other
romantics, is more or less a desire for escape. Romantic poetry presents the
world of dreams and imagination; therefore, the romantic poets seek an
escape from the hard realities of life in the world of imagination. As Keats
says in ‘Ode to a Nighingale’:
Keats was extra ordinarily endowed with the native ability of feeling acutely
with senses like Shakespeare and Milton. All his five senses react quickly to
the beauties of external world. Thus sense impression of these beauties is
transmitted into poetry by his imagination. In ‘Ode to Autumn’, he describes
the sensuous beauty of the season but his tone is of joy mixed with
solemnity of thought.
Keats poetry reveals the sensuous aspect of his love for beauty. His
expression of beauty is not only sensuous but also romantic. The poem
‘Endymion’ begin with the utterance of romantic poetry.
“A thing of beauty is a joy forever,
Its loveliness increases, it will never pass into nothingness.”
Keats saw that life was full of pains, sufferings and melancholy. Even he
himself was a prey to pain and disease. His poetry is coloured with
melancholy. In ‘Ode to a Nighingale’, there is poignant note of melancholy
when he says,
Concluding it, Keats possesses the qualities of a romantic and pure poet who
loves nature, which is seen by him with Greek temper. He never thinks about
past and future and his only concern is the present time; the present
moment of beauty and truth. In his early poetry, one can perceive him as an
escapist because there was joy and delight and overcharged imagination
because of inexperience youth. But with gradual development of thought and
experience, he comes to the conclusion that sorrows and joys are always
together; rose cannot be taken without its thrones. One can clearly sees in
his Odes that he is not an escapist but he is accepting the realities of life.
Tennyson says,