Thursday, April 30, 2020
John Keats Poesy Essays - John Keats, Common Nightingale
  John Keats Poesy  As one reads this poem of John Keats, the overwhelming feeling is the envy the  poet feels toward the nightingale and his song. He compared the carefree life of  the bird to the pain, suffering and mortality of men. He continually referred to    Greek gods and mythology when speaking of the nightingale as somehow the Bird  possessed magical powers. The speaker opened with the explanation "my heart  aches, and a drowsy numbness pains my sense" as he listened to the song of  the nightingale. He compared his feelings to those of a person that had drunk  "hemlock" or an "opiate" so that their senses had become  dull, or as if drinking from "Lethe-wards," a river of the lower  world, which produced forgetfulness of past life. Keats compared the bird to  that of a "Dryad," or a female spirit, which was assigned a certain  tree to watch over and whose life was so closely connected to the tree that if  it were to die so would the Dryad. Or perhaps in some mysterious way the  nightingale's song were "some melodious plot" to enchant his listener.    He explained the reason for his envy as being "happy in thy happiness"  or because the bird sang so beautifully with "full throated ease."    Keats longs for the effects of liquor "draught of vintage" with the  taste of the country "flora and country green" which when consumed  brings "dance, song and mirth." He compares the song of the bird with  the song of his poetry when he wishes to be "full of the true...Hippocrene"  which was a mythical fountain on Mount Helicon that inspired poetically. He  reflected on the belief that unlike his poetry, the nightingale's song would be  remembered for eternity, because the Bird's tune would go unchanged, while his  words would fade with time, so he wished "that I might drink and leave the  world unseen." Wishing to drink and disappear, to "fade away into the  forest dim, fade far away" or rather to "dissolve and ...forget"  we see how desired to escape from life and the problems that all men must cope  with. He related how he felt about his life "weariness, the fever and the  fret" and the fact that all men "sit and hear each other groan."    Some of his lamenting came from his despair about aging, how "youth grows  pale and spectre-thin, and dies; where but to think is to be full of sorrow and  leaden-eyed despairs." In comparison to himself the nightingale seemed to  have a life of ease, sitting among the trees without a care, simply singing. He  told the nightingale to fly away "for I will fly to thee," yet rather  than be carried off by "Bacchus and his pard" the Roman god of wine  and intoxication, he wished to be carried off by "wings of Poesy."    This Poesy refers to Keats poetry and he realized that he would not be able to  compose while intoxicated, so he described this condition as "the dull  brain [that] perplexes and retards." Yet while he is with the nightingale  and her sweet song "already with thee! tender is the night" he  imagined the "Queen-Moon ...on her throne, cluster'd around by all her  starry Fays" or fairies; for it is said that only during a full moon may  one witness fairy dances. This alludes to the magical condition he believes the  nightingale possesses and how she is able to lead him to this world of lore. At  this time there is very little light to identify his surroundings, so his senses  were awakened as he recognized the "soft incense hang[ing] upon the  boughs" and detected the scents of the "fruit tree wild, hawthorn,  violets, the musk-rose full of sweet wine" and listened to the "murmurous  haunt of flies." As he sat in the dark listening, he contemplated his death  and related how he is "half in love with easeful Death" having written  many times about him or "call'd him....in many a mused rhyme." At this  time Keats thinks it is a good time to die and do away with whatever pain he may  experience, as he said "seems it rich to die to cease upon midnight with no  pain" in comparison to the nightingale which is "pouring forth thy  soul abroad in such an ecstasy!" However he is quick to change this desire  when he contemplated the fact that the nightingale would continue to sing, even  if it be a sad song "thy high requiem" while he would be unable to  hear the music. He would in    
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