Friday 24 December 2010

Seasons Greetings, one and all

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   Well I'm all geared up for Christmas, and that's despite the fact that age is taking its toll. It's not that I am walking with a limp, or that I can only hear out of one ear, but rather, that this year, I had lost the will to re-assemble the colour-coded Christmas tree, that I have been putting together for the past twenty years.

    Made in Japan, we bought it originally, to stand in the spacious hall of a large detached house : all eight feet of it. But when we came to live in Norwich, some adjustments had to be made. Thankfully a saw was not required; all that was needed, was to substitute the crown, (that came as a single piece), with a fairy. And what a fairy! smug, in her long coat and matching fur hat. But Jenny loved it, so I had to do as I was told.

   Well, this year, as I have already told you, I had lost the will to piece together, again, the same tree; the same dancing lights; the same gilded decorations; or to stand, yet again, on the same stool, to secure the wretched fairy in place. But thankfully, when I mooted my reluctance to Jenny, to be fully engaged in this twice yearly ritual, (remembering that, "what goes up, must come down"), I was delighted to discover that she was of a like mind. So for the first time in twelve years, we don't have a Christmas tree in the dining area, just off the kitchen. But we do have one in the living-room with presents underneath, and all glowing in delicate blue frosted light. And Leo and Lynsey, (I have been spelling her name wrongly for years), are here, which without doubt is an important contributing factor, as to why I am "all geared up".

   Now if I wanted something different for 2011, it would be this, to have some response to my blogs. For certain, I know that they are read in the UK, the United States and the Ukraine, in the United Arab Emirates, Denmark, Slovenia and Russia, in Canada, Thailand and Brazil, South Korea, South Africa, and the Cayman Islands, in Germany, France and Croatia, in Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands and China, in Spain and India, and in Christchurch New Zealand, and not of course, forgetting my own country Ireland. But not withstanding this global audience, it is rare indeed for anyone to leave a comment, either, "good, bad, or indifferent." And here's an example of what I have in mind.

   In my current series of blogs, (to be continued in the new year), entitled, "Some Personal Reflections on the Poetry and Life of John Keats," I have commented on several occasions about the "absence of Keats" in his poetry, and about his lack of interest in that wider society that existed beyond his immediate circle of friends. Now surely not everyone agrees with me, for it must have occurred to someone, to want to put the contrary point of view, that it is impossible for a poet not to be present in his writing. And surprise, surprise, I, in response, would have agreed, and we would probably have ended up discussing, context. But of course, readers don't have to respond, and I am sufficiently self motivated, (for any number of reasons), not to be dependent on a response. But a reader, coming to life, would be a welcome change.

    But returning to the theme of Christmas, here are two poems, written by me, that are buried deep in the blog, "Peace good-will and trauma." I hope you enjoy them, and:

Happy Christmas and Happy New Year

Christmas Shopping

I saw a card in a shop today
it almost frightened my brain away.
Like a dirty mag I put it back
but retrieved it again from among the pack.
And there it was for all to see,
the changing face of the Family Tree.
And now that my life is near its end,
the greeting was: "To Mum and Friend".
_______________

Christmas

There were no rocket boosters then, to confound the night sky
just unsubtle floodlights, hauled out and in place for the occasion,
their gentle beams firing the majestic spires
and dissipating in the gloom.

And no exotic digital displays, nor laser lights,
but an innovation; a speaker above the hardware store,
from which Bing, to a dark and near deserted street, crooned
and only Rudolph ran strictly to tempo.

But a time it was of innocence and quiet excitement,
when the air was as pure and life as certain
as the cotton-wool on the Crib was white.
And where every rooftop and every chimney, unencumbered
were objects of wonder:
and the black laneway - a sanctuary,
and sleep - a nuisance.
And socks hanging in a drab kitchen -
an adventure.
When "Postman's Knock", "Forfeits", and "The Queen of Sheba",
brought joyous laughter.
And voices, adult voices, modulated,
blended with play,
and the texture and fragrance of marzipan.

Tuesday 21 December 2010

Fazed, by the moon

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06:34 As today marks the winter solstice, (the longest night and shortest day), and a full eclipse of the moon is expected, (the first occurring on the winter solstice in 400 years), I was up at twenty past five. The full moon in a clear sky was visible from the bedroom window, and that was enough to persuade me to leave a warm bed in the certain knowledge that I could return to it later. So I have had my breakfast, well ahead of schedule, and I have been out to take some pictures. According to radio broadcasts last night and this morning, the eclipse starts at about 6:20 and is full by 7:40. So here we go...



06:48 Well the eclipse has started and with my average digital camera on zoom, I have taken a few pictures, so I will take them every ten minutes or so. And a trial run earlier was no bad thing, for it allowed me to find a good spot in the garden where the light from the flash is not distorted in the snow. As for the sub zero temperature, I am well wrapped up, and my binoculars are hanging at the ready.

07:05 I have no idea as to what I have managed to capture, for despite my earlier success, I have had persistent problems with the light from the flash vis-a-vis the snow. Even standing in the middle of the gritted ............ Road, didn't solve the problem, so I moved around to the front of the house, where, within the space of a few seconds, the moon, half obscured by the earth, was completely obscured by cloud.

07:18 Now what is amazing is, that the sky is largely clear, but just at that point where the moon is setting, fast moving cloud is cutting across its path, and I mean, fast. And just now, the moon is nowhere to be seen.

07: 28 Well the dawn is upon us, and I think it's a case of "what will be will be", for I have had to content myself with a picture of where the moon should be. And looking through the study window, as I type with cold hands, there is no reason to believe that it is going to re-appear. But I tried...

Friday 19 November 2010

Some Personal Reflections on the Poetry and Life of John Keats, Part 3

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"I went the other day into an ironmonger's shop, without any change in my sensations - men and tin kettles are much the same in these days. They do not study like children at five and thirty, but they talk like men at twenty. Conversation is not a search after knowledge, but an endeavour at effect". (1)
                                                 __________



Had John Keats been of a different disposition, we might have had something like this, Alexander Pushkin's unique novel, Eugene Onegin. A contemporary of Keats, what makes Pushkin's work special, is that the story is told in verse: in a succession of stanzas, each of fourteen lines, that are structured around a recurring and complex pattern of rhymed line-endings. In the story, the central character (from whom the book takes its name), is variously described as a "dandy" and a "fop": an aspiring poet whose only accomplishment is, "in love"; a point illustrated at the outset, when Pushkin reveals the extent to which Onegin has cultivated the art of seduction:

"How early on he could dissemble,
Conceal his hopes, play jealous swain,
Compel belief, or make her tremble,
Seem cast in gloom or mute with pain,
Appear so proud or so forbearing,
At times attentive then uncaring!
What languor when his lips were sealed,
What fiery art his speech revealed!
What casual letters he would send her!
He lived, he breathed one single dream,
How self-oblivious he could seem!
How keen his glance, how bold and tender;
And when he'd wished, he'd made appear
The quickly summoned, glistening tear!"
_______________


Though the location changes as the story unfolds, it begins in St. Petersburg, where feasting, drinking, gaming, balls, aggrandisement, seduction, and ultimately, (for the young women), the marriage market, are what constitute the social merry-go-round. And it is in this context, a few stanzas further into the story, that we are introduced to Onegin the party goer:

"But look, Onegin's at the gateway;
He's past the porter, up the stair,
Through marble entry rushes straightway,
Then runs his fingers through his hair,
And steps inside. The crush increases,
The droning music never ceases;
A bold mazurka grips the crowd,
The press intense, the hubbub loud;
The guardsman clinks his spurs and dances;
The charming ladies twirl their feet --
Enchanting creatures that entreat
A hot pursuit of flaming glances;
While muffled by the violin
The wives their jealous gossip spin.
_______________


Now to some extent the character of Eugene Onegin mirrors Pushkin, whose nature was wayward, impetuous and tragically flawed, but in the context of Keats's poetry, what intrigues me about this story is, that it represents everything that Keats was not, thereby pointing up the absence in his writing of that wider society that existed beyond his immediate circle of friends. That such a society as described by Pushkin, existed in London in Keats's day, is beyond doubt, and that it should be absent from his poetry, it seems to me, has less to do with his temperament, (in that he didn't have the nature of a Pushkin), but rather, that Keats had an especially elevated view as to the nature and purpose of poetry.


In a letter to his friend Benjamin Bailey, written in October 1817, he quotes from an earlier letter to his brother George, (written about the time he was starting work on Endymion). In that letter Keats wrote of the high idea of poetical fame that he saw towering too high above him, after which, he used the metaphor of a ship on the sea to define the attributes required for the writing of great poetry: "Invention", he wrote, is "the Polar Star of Poetry" as "fancy is the Sails and Imagination the Rudder". And in a further philosophical letter to Bailey written in November 1817, (at the point where he had completed Endymion), he dwelt on the subject of "Beauty" and "Truth", a discussion that gave expression to that elevated view that he had of poetry, and from which, this often quoted passage is a part:


"I am certain of nothing but of the holiness of the Hearts affections and the truth of Imagination - What the imagination seizes as Beauty must be truth - whether it existed before or not - for I have the same idea of all our Passions as of Love they are all in their sublime, creative of essential Beauty..."


At moments like these, Keats's preoccupations were with the metaphysical, as they were in another of his often quoted lines: the opening statement in Endymion:

"A thing of beauty is a joy forever"


which I have always understood to mean, not just that the essence of something determines what it is, but that essence is an eternal quality, or put another way, something that is truly beautiful because that is the essence or substance of what it is perceived to be, cannot be something else, tomorrow: it is a moment in time that is eternal. That said, it is important to acknowledge that for Keats, "Truth" and "Beauty" were not synonymous, as is apparent in his response to Benjamin West's, Death on the Pale Horse: a painting based on the Four Horse's of the Apocalypse, the pale horse symbolising death:


"I spent Friday evening with Wells & went next morning to see Death on the Pale horse. It is a wonderful picture, when West's age is considered; But there is nothing to be intense upon; no women one feels mad to kiss; no face swelling into reality, the excellence of every Art is its intensity, capable of making all disagreeables evaporate, from their being in close relationship with Beauty & Truth - Examine King Lear & you will find this exemplified throughout; but in this picture we have unpleasantness without any momentous depth of speculation excited, in which to bury its repulsiveness -"


But, in terms of what Keats was seeking to achieve in poetry, he was reaching for the sublime; and in that same 1817 letter to his brother's George and Tom, he put his finger on that special quality that forms a man of achievement, especially in poetry,what he called Negative Capability: the idea that the creative genius, (my word not Keats's), notwithstanding their heightened perceptions can cope with uncertainty (or what in a later letter he called "halfseeing"), without the need to pursue concepts such as "beauty" and "truth" to the nth degree before they can produce great work; and he was clear as to how poetry should be conceived, so as to benefit the reader, rather than the writer: a view that brings me back to a point touched on in Part 1: the absence of Keats in Keats's poetry:


"Poetry should be great & unobtrusive, a thing which enters into one's soul, and does not startle it or amaze it with itself but with its subject - How beautiful are the retired flowers how would they loose their beauty were they to throng into the highway crying out, "admire me I am a violet! dote upon me I am a primrose!..."


An observation in this context, that lead to criticism of the notion that the standards to be applied in the new dispensation, were those as set by Wordsworth and others. For Keats there were still higher possibilities. Here again, Keats was dealing with essence, and what defined poetry for him, was a level of creativity in the writer that had the power to transfix the reader, and from which, the writer is absent; a process that was cumulative, but, that the "Many" who "have original Minds" allow themselves to be "led away by Custom".


But temperament alone is not sufficient to explain Keats's approach to poetry; a further contributing factor was that he was born at a time of change. At its most simplistic, a sense of the scale of that change is encompassed in the idea of the French Revolution, (1789-1799), and in poetic terms, in Williams Blake's preoccupation with industrialization and the emerging cities. What was happening in literature and poetry in particular, was a move away from the rational, towards the experimental: the creative power of the imagination and to feeling. And in this definition of the Romantic Era, it is important to remember that poets such as: Blake, Byron, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Keats, (Shelley is a separate case), were not rejecting the past, hence Keats's abiding interest in Spenser, Shakespeare and Milton, (who, in their turn, had experimented with things new). Nor were the Romantics offering a clearly defined view of life. A feature of Romantic poetry was the tension that existed between the creative world of the imagination and the realities of every-day life. As one commentator put it, there had to be "experience" before Blake could write his "Songs of Innocence". And it was in the context of this movement away from the rational and towards the experimental, that Keats was able to say: "I am certain of nothing but the holiness of the Hearts affections and the truth of Imagination...etc.", and reject the notion, that the standards for poetry in this new era, had been conclusively defined by Wordsworth.
_______________


Now in the context of these observations, it is worth taking a look at the poem, Sleep and Poetry. A work of the imagination. At one and the same time it is aspirational, and a statement of beliefs; and the "voice" is that of Keats. A long poem, begun in October 1816, it was published the following year, and was well received by Keats's friends. The opening section is speculative, posing a series of questions addressed to "Sleep", before "Thought" takes centre stage. But as yet, we don't know what it is that is making its presence felt, until, in the context of the wonders of nature, we are told that it is "Poesy", at which point the poem is transformed, and the language and images are those associated with religious conversion: adoration, supplication, abandonment; a spiritual uplift that Keats links, (among other things), to the idea of the moving of heaven and earth: "thunder" and the movement of "regions under" are intended to convey a sense of the power in this spiritual experience:

"O Posy ! for thee I hold my pen
That am not yet a glorious denizen
Of thy wide heaven - should I rather kneel
Upon some mountain-top until I feel
A glowing splendour round about me hung,
And echo back the voice of thine own tongue?
O Poesy ! for thee I grasp my pen
That am not yet a glorious denizen
Of thy wide heaven; yet, to my ardent prayer,
Yield from thy sanctuary some clear air,
Smoothed for intoxication by the breath
Of flowering bays, that I may die a death
Of luxury, and my young spirit follow
The morning sunbeams to the great Apollo
Like a fresh sacrifice; or, if I can bear
The o'erwhelming sweets, 'twill bring to me the fair
Vision of all places: a bowery nook
Will be elysium - an eternal book
Whence I may copy many a lovely saying
About the leaves, and flowers - about the playing
Of Nymphs in woods, and fountains; and the shade
Keeping a silence round a sleeping maid;
And many a verse from so strange influence
That we must ever wonder how, and whence
It came. Alas imaginings will hover
Round my fire-side, and haply there discover
Vistas of solemn beauty, where I'd wander
In happy silence, like the clear Meander
Through its lone vales; and where I found a spot
Of awfuller shade, or an enchanted grot,
Or a green hill, o'erspread with chequered dress
Of flowers, and fearful from its loneliness,
Write on my tablets all that was permitted,
All that was for our human sense fitted.
_______________


For me, at least, in this passage, there is an echo of the Transfiguration of Christ, as described in the gospels of St's Matthew and Mark. But in the context of the tension that exists in Romantic poetry between the world of the imagination and the actual, Keats acknowledges that he will have to come down from this ivory tower, but not before he has recorded a vision of the gods descending to earth to gaze in awe at this other world. And when he does come down from his ivory tower, the image that he uses to describe the every day, is no less purposeful:

The visions all are fled - the car [chariot] is fled
Into the light of heaven, and in their stead
A sense of real things comes doubly strong,
And, like a muddy stream, would bear along
My soul to nothingness; but I will strive
Against all doubtings, and will keep alive
The thought of that same chariot, and the strange
Journey it went.
_______________


At this Keats ponders the present, and the capacity among poets to allow the "high imagination" to fly "freely", after which there comes an overview of the history of the poetic craft and some trenchant criticism of the consequences of the rational in poetry, to which the Romantics were opposed, but not before he had acknowledged the past achievements of those who had laboured at the poetic craft, nor for personal gain, but for the love of Poesy. And as we read the criticism, the meaning is clear: that the raw ingredients that inspired great poetry had remained unchanged through time, instead, it was poetry that had lost its way:

Could all this be forgotten? Yes, a schism
Nurtured by foppery and barbarism,
Made great Apollo blush for this his land.
Men were thought wise who could not understand
His glories: with a puling infant's force
They swayed about upon a rocking horse,
And thought it Pegasus. Ah, dismal souled!
The winds of heaven blew, the ocean rolled
Its gathering waves - ye felt it not. The blue
Bared its eternal bosom, and the dew
Of summer nights collected still to make
The morning precious: beauty was awake!
Why were ye not awake? But ye were dead
To things ye knew not of - were closely wed
To musty laws line out with wretched rule
And compass vile: so that ye taught a school
Of dolts to smooth, inlay and clip, and fit,
Till, like the certain wands of Jacob's wit,
Their verses tallied. Easy was the task:
A thousand handicraftsmen were the mask
Of Poesy. Ill-fated, impious race!
That blasphemed the bright Lyrist to his face,
And did not know it ! No, they went about,
Holding a poor, decrepit standard out
Marked with most flimsy mottoes, and in large
The name of one Boileau!
______________


Now all of these things said, it is time to turn to the "experts", and in particular to Miriam Allott whose commentaries on Keats's poems, are of incalculable value to those of us who are not academics, but approaching Keats's poetry as lay-persons.


From Miriam Allott research we learn of the setting in which the idea for this poem was conceived. It happened while Keats was on a visit to Leigh Hunt's, where a bed was made up for him in library; and it was here, inspired by the artefacts in the room, that the idea of Sleep and Poetry came to him. And this is also how it came to pass, that the last sixty or seventy lines of the poem, were "an inventory of the art garniture of the room". And she gives added depth to the poem, and added insight in to the mind of Keats, where she makes connections. In what she describes as "the catalogue element in Keats's first tribute to sleep", (he returns to the theme of sleep in the concluding section of the poem), she makes a connection with the Elizabethan era: with sonnet 39, in Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella. And she makes known what authoritative sources had to say regarding inference in the poem: as to who, or what, Keats was alluding to, (bearing in mind that the poem was a criticism, as well as a declaration of intent). According to Allott the passage quoted above and beginning, "Could all this be forgiven..." represents a criticism of what were known as the Augustan poets: those of the first half of the eighteenth century. It was an incestuous period, with ambitious poets rivalling and feeding off one another, an era

"when poets were more conversant with each other than were novelists...Their works were written as direct counterpoint and direct expansions of one another, with each poet writing satire when in opposition. There was a great struggle over the nature and role of the pastoral ... primarily between Ambrose Phillips and Alexander Pope and then between their followers..." (2)

And at line 218 where Keats was interrogating, and reference was made to:

....some lone spirits who could proudly sing
Their youth away, and die?


we learn that the "lone spirits" Keats was championing, were poets such as Thomas Chatterton (1752-70), and Henry Kirke White (1785-1806), poets who were neglected by the age and died young. Chatterton at the age of 12, was writing the "Rowley Poems" and passing them off as copies of 15-century manuscripts at the church of St. Mary Ratcliffe in Bristol, but when this was found to be untrue, and as a consequence, he was unable to sell his poems in London, he killed himself. Only afterwards was it appreciated that the poems were, in fact, his own creation, in which he had used the language of the 15-century. (3). Henry Kirke White, was a young man from Nottingham who, apprenticed to a stocking weaver, was without means. But after a good deal of personal endeavour and the publication of some of his poems in 1803 (that were violently attacked by critics), he ended up at St. John's College Cambridge. He aspired to ordination, but the strain of study resulted in his premature death.


These and countless other observations by Miriam Allott, (including links to other poems by Keats), bring a level of understanding to Sleep and Poetry, the goes well beyond the mere reading of it. But, from Keats's own perspective, an ambitious task lay ahead: a clearing away of the undergrowth, so that the forgotten could be unearthed and revived, and poetry restored to to its rightful purpose, which, from his point of view, was:

that it should be a friend
To soothe the cares and lift the thoughts of man.
_______________


Now I don't of course share this limited view of the purpose of poetry; and Keats may not have shared it either, had he lived longer and not been so oppressed by illness; for as we saw in, Death on the Pale Horse, he could accept in Art, truth in all its awfulness. And unlike Keats, I have knowledge, and to some extent, the experience, from an additional two centuries of the continuing evolution of society and poetry as a consequence. So for me, with the horrors of the 20th century in mind, it is wholly acceptable that poetry should, (among other things), seek to prick our consciences to the point where it disturbs and demands a response.


As for the concept of sleep, allied to the image of the "poppy", it was for Keats symbolic of other worlds, and other possibilities, with the power to energise or rejuvenate. And the poem ends on just that note:

And up I rose refreshed, and glad, and gay,
Resolving to begin that very day
These lines; and howsoever they be done,
I leave them as a father does his son.
_______________

© Cormac McCloskey

(1) Letters of John Keats
Ed. Robert Gittings
Oxford University Press (1990)
ISBN 0-19-281081-2
Note: All other quotations attributed to Keats are taken from Gittings.

Eugene Onegin
by Alexander Pushkin
Oxford World's Classics (1995)
ISBN 978-0-19-953864-5

Death on the Pale Horse - here

Keats
The Complete Poems
Ed. Miriom Allott
Longman (1995)
ISBN 0-582-48457-X

Sources used by way of general guidance:
   Literary Terms and Criticism
   By John Peck and Martin Coyle
   Macmillan (1991)
   ISBN 0-333-36271-3

   The Reign of George III 1760-1815
   By J. Steven Watson
   Ed. Sir George Clarke
   Oxford History of England [Series] (1987)
   ISBN 0-19-821713-7

   The Age of Reform 1815-1870
   By Sir Llewellyn Woodward
   Oxford History of England [Series] 1987
   ISBN 0 19 821711 0

   (2) Wikipedia
   (3) Wikipedia

Sunday 31 October 2010

Some Personal Reflections on the Poetry and Life of John Keats, Part 2

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"Happy is England I could be content!"

Happy is England! I could be content!
   To see no other verdure than its own;
   To feel no other breezes than are blown
Through its tall woods with high romances blent:
Yet do I sometimes feel a languishment
   For skies Italian, and an inward groan
   To sit upon an Alp as on a throne,
And half forget what world or worldling meant.
Happy is England, sweet her artless daughters;
   Enough their simple loveliness for me,
      Enough their whitest arms in silence clinging:
   Yet do I often warmly burn to see
      Beauties of deeper glance, and hear their singing,
And float with them about the summer waters

_______________

When I set about preparing this blog, I had a simple idea. Having previously asked the question, Who was Keats? I thought that this time, I would focus on the writing process. To that end, I told myself, I would extract from his work, those poems that could be considered autobiographical: in that they would speak of his aspirations, his preparation and application, and of the inevitable trials and tribulations that he had encountered along the way. And together with relevant passages from his letters, I hoped that these poems would be an appropriate measure of his success: If I could achieve a down-to-earth portrayal in verse, I told myself, of Keats's perception of what it was to be a poet, and of what it cost him to succeed, I would consider it success.

Well to that end I had some interesting titles to hand, of which these are a few; and appended to them a sentence or two as to why I thought they might be relevant. Taken together, I was certain that, "O Solitude! if I must with thee dwell!"; and "To one who has been long in city pent", had something to say, not just about Keats's perception of what it was to be a poet, but from where or what poetic inspiration came. As for, "How many bards gild the lapses of time!", this poem seemed to represent not just Keats's appreciation of past poetic influences, but also his awareness of the need to stand apart from these influences, "so as to dwell on the present and the task in hand":

How many bards gild the lapses of time
   A few of them have ever been the food
   Of my delighted fancy - I could brood
Over their beauties, earthly, or sublime:
And often, when I sit me down to rhyme,
   These will in throngs before my mind intrude:
   But no disturbance, no disturbance rude
Do they occasion, 'tis a pleasing chime.
So the numbered sounds that evening store;
The songs of birds, the whispering of the leaves,
   The voice of waters, the great bell that heaves
With solemn sound, and thousand others more,
   That distance of recognizance bereaves,
Made pleasing music; and not wild uproar.

­_______________

Moving on, and for now, passing over Sleep and Poetry, and Ode to Psyche, (to the soul), it is worth stopping for a few moments at "O thou whose face hath felt the winter's wind", a poem that I labelled "philosophical". In a letter written in February 1818, Keats, in reflective mood, explained to his friend John Hamilton Reynolds, (himself a writer), how this poem came to be written:

"I was lead into these thoughts my dear Reynolds" [his musings on what constitutes a perfect life in the context of "Poesy"], "by the beauty of the morning operating on a sense of idleness - I have not read any Books - The Morning said I was right - I had no idea but of the morning and the Thrush said I was right - seeming to say:

O thou whose face hath felt the winter's wind;
   Whose eye has seen the Snow clouds hung in Mist
   And the black-elm tops 'mong the freezing Stars
   To thee the spring will be a harvest time--
O thou whose only book has been the light
   Of supreme darkness which thou feedest on
   Night after night, when Phoebus was away
   To thee the Spring shall be a triple morn--
O fret not after knowledge - I have none
   And yet my song comes native with the warmth
O fret not after knowledge - I have none
   And yet the Evening listens - He who saddens
At thoughts of idleness cannot be idle,
And he's awake who thinks himself asleep.

_______________

Now whatever insights we might gain from these poems, I quickly came to appreciate that my approach was too simplistic. What was essential was that Keats's poetry should be placed in context, a task made difficult, (relying on his poems alone), by Keats's indifference to the age in which he was living, and in particular to that society that existed beyond his narrow circle of friends. So a different approach was needed if I was to accurately convey a sense, not just of the depth and strength of his commitment to the poetic craft, but also, something of the influences that shaped him, and identified him, as being among that group of poets known as The Romantics.

Now in the context of understanding Keats's detachment from the wider society, (and his need, at times, to separate himself from his closest friends), we must remember that Keats was a sensual being, something readily apparent here, where in reassuring Fanny Brawne he conveys something of the pain that he has endured in separating himself from her. The letter was written at Winchester, in August 1819:

"Forgive me for this Flint-worded Letter - and believe and see that I cannot think of you without some sort of energy - though mal a propos - even as I leave off - it seems to me that even a few more moments thought of you would uncrystallize and dissolve me - I must not give way to it - but turn to my writing again - If I fail I shall die hard - O my love, your lips are growing sweet again to my fancy - I must forget them - ..."

Now in this context of separateness and commitment to poetry, and in consideration of the influences that were at work, and the price paid by Keats's in striving for his ideal, there is much to be gained in retracing our steps back to April 1817, and following Keats form Carisbrooke on the Isle of Wight, to Margate, and from there to Canterbury, and Oxford, and back to Hampstead, as he worked on his epic poem Endymion; a work that in my previous blog I described as: "a benchmark for Keats: a quite deliberate test of his ability, in the future, to write extensively and with imagination." And in this journey he was not alone, for as he went from place to place, he was forever in the shadow of those literary greats who were to be such an important influence in his life: Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Wordsworth; and as we go, we will get some understanding of what it was, for Keats, to be a poet.

At Carisbrooke he is in ebullient mood and creating an environment that is conducive to work. He has the works of Shakespeare and Spencer to hand, and has put up pictures of Haydon, Mary Queen of Scots, and Milton with his daughters, and he is bubbling with enthusiasm:

"I find that I cannot exist without poetry", he tells Reynolds, " - without eternal poetry - half the day will not do the whole of it - I begin with a little, but habit has made me a Leviathan - I had become all a Tremble from not having written anything of late - the Sonnet over leaf did me some good I slept the better last night for it".

It was, On The Sea, and was one of only a handful of poems that he wrote in the eight months that it took him to complete Endymion:

It keeps eternal whisperings around
   Desolate shores, and with its mighty swell
   Gluts twice ten thousand Caverns; till the spell
Of Hecate leaves them their old shadowy sound.
Often 'tis in such gentle temper found
   That scarcely will the very smallest shell
   Be moved for days from whence it sometime fell
When last the winds of Heaven were unbound
O ye who have your eyeballs vext and tir'd
   Feast them upon the wideness of the Sea
      O ye whose Ears are dimmed with uproar rude.
   Or feed too much with cloying melody--
      Sit ye near some old Cavern's Mouth and brood
Until ye start as if the Sea Nymphs quired--

_______________

At Margate, in May, he wrote to Leigh Hunt, friend and editor of the Examiner, in which his first poem was published, and to Benjamin Haydon, also a friend and historical painter, and to his publishers John Taylor and James Augustus Hessey. These letters are interesting for what they reveal about the cost, as he struggled with Endymion: his anxieties and self-doubt. And it is apparent from the letter to Haydon, that apart from his influence on Keats in respect of art and culture, more broadly, he fulfilled the role of mentor:

To Hunt:

"I vow that I have been down in the Mouth lately, at this work. [Endymion] These last two days however I have felt more confident - I have asked myself so often why I should be a poet more than other Men - seeing how great a thing it is - how much great things are to be gained by it - What a thing to be in the Mouth of Fame - that at last the idea has grown so monstrously beyond my seeming power of attainment that the other day I nearly consented with myself to drop into a Phaeton - yet 'tis a disgrace to fail even in a large attempt, and at this moment I drive the thought from me. I began my Poem about a Fortnight since and have done some every day except travelling ones - Perhaps I have done a good deal for the time but it appears such a Pin's point to me that I will not copy any out...."

And Haydon:

"I suppose by your telling me not to give way to forbodings George has mentioned to you what I have lately said in my Letters to him - truth is I have been in such a state of Mind as to read over my Lines and hate them. I am "one that gathers Samphire dreadful trade" the Cliff of Poesy Towers above me-...I read and write about eight hours a day. There is an old saying "well begun is half done" 't is a bad one. I would use instead - Not begun at all "till half done" so according to that I have not begun my Poem and consequently (a priori) can say nothing about it."

Then, and in the context of what he saw as Leigh Hunt's "self delusions" in respect of poetry, he wrote:

"There is no greater sin after the 7 deadly than to flatter onself into an idea of being a great Poet - or one of those beings who are privileged to wear out their Lives in the pursuit of Honor -how comfortable a feel it is that such a Crime must bring its heavy Penalty? That if one be a Selfdeluder accounts will be balanced."

And Taylor and Hessey:

"I went day by day at my Poem for a month at the end of which time the other day I found my Brain so overwrought that I had neither Rhyme nor reason in it - so was obliged to give up for a few days - I hope soon to be able to resume my Work - I have endeavoured to do so once or twice but to no Purpose - Instead of Poetry I have swimming in my head - and feel all the effects of a Mental Debauch - lowness of Spirits - anxiety to go on without the power to do so which does not at all tend to my ultimate Progression - However tomorrow I will begin my next Month - This evening I go to Canterbury - having got tired of Margate - I was not right in my head when I came - At Canty [Canterbury] I hope the remembrance of Chaucer will set me forward like a Billiard-ball."

But even in these troubled times, Keats was capable of lightness of touch, as in this moving ending to his letter to Hessey:

"So now in the name of Shakespeare, Raphael and all our Saints I commend you to the care of Heaven!"

Shakespeare, an ever present influence and quoted in his letters, was the inspiration for his sonnet, On The Sea. And when the lady of the house at Carisbrooke, where he was staying, insisted that he take with him the bust of Shakespeare that adorned the passage, it prompted this discussion on destiny, with Haydon:

"I remember you saying that you had notions of a good Genius presiding over you - I have of late had the same thought, for things which [I] do half at Random are afterwards confirmed by my judgement in a dozen features of Propriety - Is it too daring to fancy Shakespeare this Provider? When in the Isle of Wight I met with a Shakespeare in the Passage of the house at which I lodged - it comes nearer to my idea of him than any I have seen - I was but there a Week yet the old Woman made me take it with me though I went off in a hurry - Do you not think this is ominous of good? ..."

Now when reading Keats, I am conscious of the maxim that, "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing", something brought home to me with force, when I read this, another of those few poems that Keats wrote while working on Endymion.

      Unfelt, unheard, unseen,
      I've left my little queen,
Her languid arms in silver slumber lying:
      Ah! through their nestling touch,
      Who--who could tell how much
There is for madness--cruel, or complying?

      Those faery lids how sleek"
      Those lips how moist!--they speak,
In ripest quiet, shadows of sweet sounds:
      Into my fancy's ear
      Melting a burden dear
How "Love doth know no fullness nor no bounds."

      True!--tender monitors!
      I bend unto your laws:
This sweetest day for dalliance was born!
      So without more ado,
      I'll feel my heaven anew,
For all the blushing of the hasty morn.

_______________

When I first read this poem I felt certain that it was written for Fanny Brawne, until it occurred to me, that at this point they hadn't met. So for guidance I turned to the "experts". One tells me:

"Date uncertain, but written before the 17 August 1817. Published 1848."

While another, by far the most substantial commentary that I have to hand, says:

"Probably written early summer 1817 with the preceding poem ["You say you love"] and certainly before the 17 August 1817..." And going to the headnote for the poem in question, Miriam Allott, whose notes these are, links this poem to Keats's meeting a, "Mrs. Isabella Jones at Hastings May-June 1817" and suggests a link between this poem and the "Elizabethan poem, A Proper Wooing Song." Which goes to reinforce the point, that for a proper understanding of the depth of Keats commitment to poetry, and the influences at work in it, we simply have to consult the "experts". But for now I want to leave you with this, a lengthy quotation from Keats's letter to Benjamin Bailey, dated 8 October 1817, and written from Hampstead. Endymion is nearing completion and here he is quoting from a letter that he wrote to his brother George in the spring; and if you have the time, and inclination, between this and my next blog on the subject of Keats, there is plenty here to chew on:

""As to what you say about my being a poet, I retu[r]n no answer but by saying that the high idea I have of poetical fame makes me think I see it towering to high above me. At any rate I have no right to talk until Endymion is finished - it will be a test, a trial of my Powers of Imagination and chiefly of my invention which is a rare thing indeed - by which I must make 4000 Lines of one bare circumstance and fill them with Poetry, and when I consider that this is a great task, and that when it is done it will take me but a dozen paces towards the Temple of Fame - it makes me say - God forbid that I should be without such a task! I have heard Hunt say and may be asked - Why endeavour after a long Poem? To which I should answer - Do not the lovers of Poetry like to have a little Region to wander in where they may pick and choose, and in which the images are so numerous that many are forgotten and new in a second Reading: Which may be food for a week's stroll in Summer? Do not they like this better than what they can read through before Mrs. Williams comes down stairs? A Morning work at most. Besides a long Poem is a test of invention which I take to be the Polar Star of Poetry, as Fancy is the Sails, and Imagination the Rudder. Did our great Poets ever write short Pieces? I mean the shape of Tales - This same invention seems i[n]deed of late Years to have been forgotten as a Poetical excellence. But enough of this, I put on no Laurels till I shall have finished Endymion, and I hope Apollo is [not] angered at my having made a mockery at him at At Hunts"". To which he adds, significantly, ""I refused to visit Shelley, that I might have my own unfettered scope.""
­________________

© Cormac McCloskey

Sources:
From my notes: "so as to dwell on the present and the task in hand":


Letters of John Keats
Oxford Letters & Memoirs
Editor, Robert Gittings
ISBN 0-18-281081-2 (1990)

John Keats: The Complete Poems
Penguin Classics
Editor, John Barnard
ISBN (Not given) (1988)

Keats: The Complete Poems
Editor, Miriam Allott
Longman (1995)
ISBN 0-582-48457--X

Some Personal Reflections on the Poetry and Life of John Keats, Part 1

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“Bards of Passion and of Mirth
Ye have left your souls on earth!
Have you souls in Heaven too,
Doubled lived in regions new"
__________

This philosophic questioning, it seems to me, is a good point at which to begin sharing with you, my thoughts on the poetry and life of John Keats; to which I would like to add the concluding sentiments as expressed in this particular Ode:

“Thus ye live on high, and then
On the earth ye live again;
And the souls ye left behind you
Teach us, here, the way to find you
Where your other souls are joying,
Never slumbered, never cloying.
Here, your earth-born souls still speak
To mortals, of their little week;
Of their sorrows and delights;
Of their passions and their spites;
Of their glory and their shame;
What doth strengthen and what maim.
Thus ye teach us, every day,
Wisdom, though fled far away.”

_______________

Now there is nothing profound either in the structure or content of this poem, but instead, the priceless affirmation of a truth: that each succeeding generation can draw on the abundance of riches that have been left to it by those who have gone before. But of course, as Keats well understood, we have to want to be influenced, which was why he devoted time to the study of fellow poets such as Chaucer, Spencer, Shakespeare and Milton; and, had an interest in, and view about, his contemporaries: Fielding, Wordsworth, Shelley and Byron.

And closely allied to the ideas expressed in this poem, are those to be found in Fancy, a poem that first appeared in a long letter that Keats wrote to his only surviving brother George, and his wife Georgiana, who, earlier, in that year, 1818, had emigrated to America. This letter, begun on the 16 December and not completed until January 1819, was started just two weeks after the death of their younger brother Tom, whom John Keats had cared for in his final weeks of life. So when Keats, in this poem, reflects on the transient nature of things, and works (backwards) through the seasons, consciously or unconsciously, powerful forces are at work, because chief among the formative influences in Keats early life, was death:

   “O sweet Fancy! let her loose -
Summer’s joys are spoilt by use,
And the enjoying of the Spring
Fades as does its blossoming;
Autumn’s red-lipped fruitage too,
Blushing through the mist and dew,
Cloys with tasting,”
_______________

That said, this poem is entirely positive, for it makes an important statement about the capacity of the creative mind to go beyond the norm, an idea that Keats conveys with subtlety in this rhyming couplet:

“Then let winged Fancy wander
Through the thought still spread beyond her”

The point being, that the extension of our horizon is something that comes from within. As indicated here, Fancy is a caged bird that if once let loose will soar into the heavens, and in giving expression to the consequence of this freeing of the captive mind, Keats retraces its path back through the seasons, not as previously, to the point of decline and stagnation, but to a fullness of life in “Autumn” at which point the imagination (Fancy), makes it possible for us to see, hear, and feel those earlier sensations in the present moment:

“She will bring thee, all together,
All delights of summer weather;
All the buds and bells of May,
From dewy sword or thorny spray;
All the heaped Autumn’s Wealth,
With a still, mysterious stealth:
She will mix these pleasures up
Like three fit wines in a cup,
And thou shalt quaff it – thou shalt hear
Distant harvest-carols clear;
Rustle of the reaped corn;
Sweet birds antheming the morn:
And, in the same moment – hark!
‘Tis the early April lark,
Or the rooks, with busy caw,
Foraging for sticks and straw.”
________________

So accepting Keats’s point in these poems, that the poet can live twice, and that the past can be enjoyed simultaneously with the present, the poem, in the context of Fancy, progresses, until in its closing moments we are carried into the realms of Greek mythology, to the worlds of Cere: the goddess of corn and of harvests, to Pluto, in the poem alluded to as, ”the God of Torment”, to Hebe, a daughter of Jupiter and Juno, who was fair and always in the bloom of youth, and Jove, or (Jupiter), the most powerful of all the god’s among the ancients. And it was this preoccupation with the mythological: a feature of Keats’s poetry, that I have little knowledge of, that unexpectedly sent me off in a different direction.

As I read Endymion, Keats’s first attempt at Epic poetry based on the Greek myths, (and that is in excess of a hundred pages), I found myself becoming increasingly exasperated with grots, damsels, dells, bowers, nymphs, shepherds, and winged beasts; and fatigued, as I struggled amidst a panoply of unfamiliar names, to know what they represented. And as some had multiple identities, to know who was who. But not withstanding these frustrations, I kept going, for I had sufficient knowledge to know that this obscure poem had been a benchmark for Keats: a quite deliberate test of his ability, in the future, to write extensively and with imagination. But the further I travelled through this unreal world, the more I was confronted not by new God’s or strange creatures, but by the spectre of Robert Burns, whose personality is ever present in his poems, as is the physical and social landscape in which he lived. A consummate performer, he had a definite sense of self, and a determination that his many voices would be heard, and that he, Robert Burns, would be remembered. Whether it was lines of tenderness or of seduction, of humour or self deprecation, or an acerbic wit that mocked the self righteous, or the image of himself as a Scot poet forced into exile so that he could earn a living, the personality and character of Burns was ever present. And this was what I was missing in Endymion, the personality of Keats, and though I had read his poetry previously, I was disturbed by the though that he would be just as elusive in his better known poems; so much so, that I felt it a necessity to ask the question, Who was Keats? and as to whether or not it would be possible to construct a biography of him, minus his poems. An absurd idea you might think, but none the less, a measure of the extent to which Keats’s goal as a poet, seemed, to be at odds with that of Burns.

Well the good news is, that in answering the question, Who was Keats? there is plenty, apart from his poetry, to go on: the letters that he wrote to family and friends between 1814 and 1820, and those written by his fiance Fanny (Frances) Brawn to his sister also called Fanny. And there are the letters and biography of Keats written by his friend Charles Armitage Brown, to which we can add the disturbing but deeply moving letters sent from Italy by the artist Joseph Severn, who, in Charles Brown’s absence, (for he could not be contacted), accompanied Keats to Italy, and cared for him, in the sometimes terrible last days of his life.

So what then, form these sources, can we know about the man:

When Fanny Brawne, as Keats had asked her to do, began what became a sustained exchange of letters with his sister, letters that began the day after the Maria Crowther sailed for Italy, she penned this portrait of the man she intended to marry:

”I cannot tell you how much everyone here exerted themselves for him, nor how much he is liked, which is the more wonderful as he is the last person to exert himself to gain people’s friendship. I am certain that he has some spell that attaches them to him, or else he has fortunately met with a set of friends that I did not believe could be found in the world……”

And that such people did exist, in Keats’s life, is at its most poignant in the person of Joseph Severn, who, writing to Charles Brown from Rome on 14 December 1820, gave this account of Keats’ decline:

“Not a single thing will digest. The torture he suffers all and every night, and best part of the day, is dreadful in the extreme. The distended stomach keeps him in perpetual hunger or craving; and this is augmented by the little nourishment he takes to keep down the blood. Then his mind is worse than all: despair in every shape - his imagination and memory present every thought – so strong that every morning and night I tremble for his intellect – the recollections of England – of his “good friend Brown” – and his “happy few weeks in x x x x ‘s care” – his sister and brother. Oh! he will mourn over every circumstance to me whilst I cool his burning forehead – until I tremble through every vein – concealing my tears from his staring glassy eyes. How he can be Keats again from all this – I have little hope – but I may see it too gloomily, since each coming night I sit up adds its dismal contents to my mind.”
_______________

Born on 31st October 1795, John Keats was the oldest of five children to Thomas and Frances Keats. And it was the circumstances of his early years, that prompted me to suggest, that ”death”, was the most formative of influences in his early life and poetry. By the age of 14, both his parents, his brother Edward, and his maternal grandfather John Jennings, were dead. When the mother remarried in 1804 the Keats children went to live with their grandparents, only for the security provided in this move to be shaken by John Jennings death just nine months later. The Keats children, however, continued to live with their grandmother Alice Jennings, who, on the death of their mother in 1810, appointed John Nowland Sandall, and Richard Abbey as their legal guardians. So in effect, by the age of 14, Keats had been orphaned twice. Not surprising then, that as a young man he emerged into the adult world, with strong paternal feelings for his younger brothers and sister; a watchfulness that was a recurring characteristic in his letters to them. To Fanny who was living with her legal guardian Richard Abbey, he wrote simple but thoughtful letters, giving encouragement, and at times, advice. In a letter written at Oxford in September 1817, (where he was visiting a friend, and Fanny was 14 and still living with her guardian), he encouraged her to write and tell him about her reading, “if it be only six Pages in a week”. In response, he told her, he would write:

“….This I feel is a necessity for we ought to be come intimately acquainted, in order that I may not only, as you grow up, love you as my only Sister, but confide in you as my dearest friend…”

Then, in simple terms, and in the context of his poem, he tells her the story of Endymion, before, with a degree of naivety, (as he had never travelled abroad), he describes Oxford, and tells her of the letters that he has received from George and Tom: postmarked Paris:

“This Oxford I have no doubt is the finest city in the world – it is full of old Gothic buildings – Spires – towers - Quadrangles – Cloisters Groves & is surrounded with more clear streams than I ever saw together – I take a Walk by the Side of one of them Every evening and thank God, we have not had a drop of rain these many days – I had a long and interesting letter from George, cross lines by a short one from Tom yesterday dated Paris – They both send their loves to you – Like most Englishmen they feel a mighty preference for every thing English – the french Meadows, the trees the People the Towns the Churches, the Books the every thing – although they may be in themselves good; yet when put in comparison with our green Island they all vanish like Swallows in October.”

And in the following year while on a walking tour of the Lakes and Scotland, with his friend Charles Brown, Keats writes to her from Dumfries, enclosing poems that he has written for her. “We are in the midst of Meg Merrilies’ country”, he tells her, after which he copies out his poem, based on the story of Meg Merrilies as told to him by Charles Brown as the walked along:

“Old Meg she was a Gipsy
   And liv’d upon the Moors
Her bed it was the brown heath turf
   And her home was out of doors

Her apples were swart blackberries
   Her currants pods o’ broom
Her wine was dew o’ the wild white rose
   Her book a churchyard tomb

Her Brothers were the craggy hills
   Her Sisters lurchen trees
Alone with her great family
   She liv’d as she did please

No breakfast has she many a morn
   No dinner many a noon
And ‘stead of supper she would stare
   Full hard against the Moon -

But every morn of woodbine fresh
   She made her garlanding
And every night the dark glen Yew
   She wove and she would sing -

And with her fingers old and brown
   She plaited Mats o’ Rushes
And gave them to the Cottagers
   She met among the Bushes

Old Meg was brave as Margaret Queen
   And tall as Amazon:
An old red blanket cloak she wore;
   A chip hat had she on -
God rest her aged bones somewhere
   She died full long agone!”
________________

After which he wrote:

If you like these sorts of Ballads I will now and then scribble one for you – If I send any to Tom I’ll tell him to send them to you – I have so many interruptions that I cannot manage to fill a Letter in one day – since I scribbled the Song we have walked through a beautiful Country to Kirkudbright – at which place I will write you a song about myself -”

And what he wrote has a recurring refrain as in the opening lines of this thought provoking, and amusing final verse:

“There was a naughty Boy
And a naughty boy was he
He ran away to Scotland
The people for to see-
There he found
That the ground
Was as hard
That a yard
Was as long,
That a song
Was as merry,
That a cherry
Was as red -
That lead
Was as weighty
That fourscore
Was as eighty
That a door
Was as wooden
As in england –
So he stood in
His shoes
And he wondered
He wondered
He stood in his
Shoes and he wonder’d”
_______________

Not much more than a year later, Tom would be dead, and George and his wife Georgiana, living in America; and given the “global village” in which we now live, it is all too easy to forget how distant a place America was in those days, or, of how slow and uncertain the lines of communication were. So to all intents and purposes after Tom’s death on 1 December 1818, Keats was on his own; as Richard Abbey’s cautious nature made contact between Keats and his sister difficult. But up to the point where George emigrated, it is clear from the extent to which Keats shared the details of his social, as well as his literary life, with his brothers, that they were a close family unit; a togetherness that in the sonnet, To my Brothers, (written in celebration of Tom’s 17 birthday), is tangible:

“Small, but busy flames play through the fresh-laid coals,
   And their faint cracklings o’er our silence creep
   Like whispers of the household gods that keep
A gentle empire o’er fraternal souls.
And while, for rhymes, I search around the poles,
   Your eyes are fixed, as in poetic sleep,
   Upon the lore, so voluble and deep,
That aye at fall of night our care condoles.
This is your birth-day Tom, and I rejoice
   That thus it passes smoothly, quietly.
Many such eves of gently whispering noise
   May we together pass, and calmly try
What are this world’s true joys – ere the great voice,
   From its fair face, shall bid our spirits fly.”
__________

Later in a letter dated April 1817, while on route to the Isle of Wight, Keats describes the overnight coach journey to Southampton, and tells his brothers of how lonely he felt at breakfast. And much later in the year, December, we get a glimpse into his artistic and social life, that, in context, happened by default, when his friend Charles Dilke interrupted his letter writing:

“I have had two very pleasant evenings with Dilke yesterday & today; & at this moment just come back from him & feel in the humour to go on with this, begun in the morning, & from which he came to fetch me. I spent Friday evening with Wells & went the next morning to see Death on the Pale horse. It is a wonderful picture, when West’s age is considered. But there is nothing to be intense upon: no women one feels mad to kiss; no face swelling into reality. the excellence of every art is its intensity, capable of making all disagreeables evaporate, from their being in close proximity to Beauty & Truth – Examine King Lear & you will find this exemplified throughout; but in this picture we have unpleasantness without any momentous depth of speculation excited in which to bury its repulsiveness…”

But it was not all intellectual rigour, for, as is apparent from a letter dated 5 January 1818, “boys will be boys”, and after referencing some bawdy conversation with regard to women, Keats’s attention turns to what in folklore, is popularly known as, - the piss pot:

“…on proceeding to the Pot in the cupboard it soon became full on which the Court door was opened Frank Floodgate bawls out, Hoollo! here’s an opposition pot – Ay, says Rice in one you have a Yard for your pot, and in the other a pot for your Yard. – Bailey was there and seemed to enjoy the Evening Rice said he cared less about the hour than anyone and the p[r]oof is his dancing – he cares not for time, dancing as if he was deaf. Old Redall not being used to give parties had no idea of the Quantity of wine that would be drank and he actually put in readiness and on the kitchen Stairs 8 dozen -”

And he shared with his brothers, not just his views on his contemporaries: Wordsworth in particular, (but without referring it in his letter dated 23, January 1818), the effect that the challenge of composing Endymion, had on him:

“I think a little change has taken place in my intellect lately – I cannot bear to be uninterested or unemployed. I, who for so long a time, have been addicted to passiveness – Nothing is finer for the purposes of great productions, than a very gradual ripening of the intellectual powers – As an instance of this – observe – I sat down yesterday to read King Lear once again the thing appeared to demand the prologue of a Sonnet, I wrote it & began to read – “

After which he copied out the sonnet, a poem refined before publication, and that now goes by the title, “On Sitting Down to Read “King Lear” Once Again":

“O golden-tongued Romance, with serene lute!
   Fair plumed Syren, Queen of far-away!
   leave melodizing on this wintry day,
Shut up thine olden pages, and be mute:
Adieu! for, once again, the fierce dispute
   Between damnation and impassioned clay
   Must I burn through, once more humbly assay
The bitter sweet of this Shakespearian fruit:
Chief Poet! and ye clouds of Albion,
   Begetters of our deep eternal theme
When through the old oak forests I am gone,
   Let me not wander in a barren dream,
But, when I am consumed in the fire,
Give me new Phoenix wings to fly at my desire.”

_______________

Among his friends, Keats was a conciliator, as is apparent in the dispute between John Hamilton Reynolds, Benjamin Haydon, and Haydon and Leigh Hunt, (the details of which are of their time), and thereby not particularly interesting. Writing to his friend, Benjamin Bailey, a clergyman, on 23 January 1818 he wrote:

“Things have happened lately of great Perplexity You must have heard of them – Reynolds and Haydon retorting and recriminating – and parting for ever – the same thing has happened between Haydon and hunt – It is unfortunate – Men should bear with each other – there lives not the Man who may not be cut up, aye hashed to pieces on his weakest side. The best of Men have but a portion of good in them – a kind of spiritual yeast in their frames which creates the ferment of existence – by which a man is propell’d to act and strive and buffet with Circumstances. The sure way Bailey, is first to know a Man’s faults, and then be passive, if after that he insensibly draws you towards him then you have no Power to break the link. Before I felt interested in either Reynolds or Haydon - I was well read in their faults yet knowing them I have been cementing gradually with both – I have an affection for them both for reasons almost opposite – and to both must I of necessity cling – supported always by the hope that when a little time – a few years shall have tried me more fully in their esteem I may be able to bring them together – the time must come because they have both hearts and they will recollect the best parts of each other when this gust is over blown…”

But among these same friends, in the context of his poetry, some were more important than others. B. R. Haydon: an historical painter, was instrumental in introducing Keats to aspects of Greek culture, in particular they went together to the British Museum to view the Elgin Marbles. Charles Brown, on the other hand, (who invited Keats to come and live with him after Tom’s death), took a keen interest in his writing, encouraged him where necessary, and together they collaborated on writing the play, Otho the Great. And there were others, but one that we can not omit, was his publisher, John Taylor.

The extent of Haydon’s influence, and Keats’ admiration for him, are apparent in his letter of March 1817. By that time, he had already written the sonnet On Seeing the Elgin Marbles, and another in this context, dedicated to Haydon himself. And that Keats saw him as a mentor, there can be no doubt:

“You tell me never to despair – I wish it was as easy for me to observe the saying – truth is I have a horrid Morbidity of Temperament which has shown itself at intervals – it is I have no doubt the greatest Enemy and stumbling block I have to face – I may even say it is likely to be the cause of my disappointment. …I am very sure you do love me as your own Brother – I have seen it in your continual anxiety for me – and I assure you that your welfare and fame is and will be a chief pleasure to me all my Life. I know no one but you who can be fully sensible of the turmoil and anxiety, the sacrifice of all what is called comfort the readiness to Measure time by what is done and to die in 6 hours could plans be brought to conclusions – the looking upon the Sun the Moon and the Stars, the Earth and its contents as materials to form greater things – that is to say ethereal things – but here I am talking like a Madman greater things than our Creator himself made !!…”

As for his relationship with John Taylor, with whom Keats had to work closely in preparing the proofs for Endymion, and other poems, what was a personal friendship was sustained to the end; with Keats in his letters, expressing appreciation for Taylor’s help and patience in preparing the proofs.

In the penultimate letter sent to Charles Brown from Naples on 1 November 1820, Keats pours out his heart in respect of Fanny Brawn and concludes his letter by saying:

“My dear Brown, for my sake, be her advocate for ever. I cannot say a word about Naples; I do not feel at all concerned in the thousand novelties around me. I am afraid to write to her. I should like her to know that I do not forget her. Oh, Brown. I have coals of fire in my breast. It surprised me that the human heart is capable of containing and bearing so much misery. Was I born for this end? God bless her, and her mother, and my sister, and George, and his wife, and you, and all”

And when he was taking leave of Brown in his final letter, marked, “Rome 20 November 1820″, (which is what he was doing), his thoughts are for his brother and sister, and he is apologetic:

“Write to George as soon as you receive this, and tell him how I am, as far as you can guess; – and also a note to my sister – who walks about my imagination like a ghost – she is so like Tom. I can scarcely bid you good bye even in a letter. I always made an awkward bow.”

Now I appreciate that in the circumstances, these are emotive passages, but for me they are a true reflections of Keats’s capacity, throughout his life, to reveal himself. In this sense, (of being open to people), he was uncomplicated, and there was a nobility in his nature, which may explain why people were drawn to him in the way that Fanny Brawn suggests. And he was perceptive and kind: he made connections, so that the present was always - the inbetween - the link in a chain, connecting the past with the future. And he was kind, not just in respect of his feuding friends, but as exemplified in his capacity to be concerned for Fanny Brawne, and his next of kin, even in his darkest moments. And he was a saint. And should this observation shock you, let me explain.

Keats was an idealist, and a purist, who had an idea of poetry that was altogether different from that of Robert Burns. And while like Burns, he wanted to achieve fame as a poet, unlike Burns, the world as it was, was not his concern, which was why he did not write to please public sentiment. Instead, he believed that there was something else worth striving for: a beauty and a truth: an elevation of the spirit or a degree of consciousness that went beyond the norm, and which he sought to discover and give expression to in his poetry, and against terrible odds. In this context, Keats was a mystic, which explains the absence of ego in his poetry, and why there is something understated in him. And as I hope to show in succeeding blogs, besides what is to be discovered more broadly in the poems, in the context of this particular blog, there is more to add, in answering the question, Who was Keats?

_______________

© Cormace McCloskey
Sources:

Ode, and Fancy,
Letter to George and Georgiana Keats, begun December 1818
Letters of John Keats
Edited by Robert Gitting
Oxford University Press 1990
ISBN 0-19-281081-2 (pbk)

Extract: Fanny Brawne to Fanny Keats
Letters of Fanny Brawne to Fanny Keats 1820-1824
Fred Edgcumbe (ed)
London. Oxford University Press (1936)

Extract: Letter, Joseph Severn to Charles Brown
The Life of John Keats
By Charles Armitage Brown
Oxford University Press. London N. York (1937)

Extract: Keats to his sister, 10 Sept 1815 and 2,3,5 July 1818
GITTING. as above

To my Brothers
BARNARD as below

“On Sitting Down to Read “King Lear” Once Again”
John Keats The Complete Poems
John Barnard (ed)
London. The Folio Society 2002
Available (Paperback, Penguin Classics)

Note: Brown’s biography of Keats is available to read (in full) – here

N.B. This blog was first piblished on 27 Semtemper 2010, but due to a mistake on my part, where I unintentionally deleted it, it had to be re-posted

Thursday 9 September 2010

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On Its Way



The Life and Poetry of John Keats


_____________________________________

Writing from Teignmouth in Devonshire in April 1818, John Keats had this to say about his future plans:

"I propose within a month to put my knapsack at my back and make a pedestrian tour through the North of England, and part of Scotland - to make a sort of Prologue to the Life I intend to pursue - that is to write, to study and to see all Europe at the lowest expense. I will clamber through the Clouds and exist. I will get such an accumulation of stupendous recollections that as I walk through the suburbs of London I may not see them - I will stand upon Mount Blanc and remember this coming summer when I intend to straddle ben Lomond - with my Soul! - "

When he penned these lines, John Keats had no idea of the hand that fate was about to play: of how, Tom, the youngest of his brothers, (who was with him when he wrote this letter), would be dead within the year; or, of how his own health would become so undermined that he would have to abandon his walking tour of Scotland, and see his energies dissipated, as he struggled to cope with the competing forces in his life. His desire to excel in poetry on the one hand, and on the other, his love for Fanny, (Frances) Brawne; a conflict that brought him to the depth of despair as he recognised in himself, the disease, Consumption, (Tuberculosis) that had killed Tom.

This story, with its tragic ending, is well known, even where the poetry is not; and when I read, To Fanny, the penultimate poem that he wrote, I sense a purity, beauty, and naturalness in it, akin to any running stream that he might have encountered on Mount Blanc. It is as though all the competing forces in his life; had come together, in an act of generosity that would allow him to say everything that he could possibly want to say, with dignity, about the pain of loss:

                           1
Physician Nature! let my spirit blood!
O ease my heart of verse and let me rest
Throw me upon thy tripod till the flood;
Of stifling numbers ebbs from my full breast.
A theme! a theme Great Nature! give a theme;
   Let me begin my dream.
   I come - I see thee, as thou standest there,
Beckon me out into the wintry air.

                            II
Ah! dearest love, sweet home of all my fears,
   And hopes, and joys, and panting miseries,
   Tonight, if I may guess, thy beauty wears
      A smile of such delight,
      As brilliant and as bright,
   As when with ravished, aching, vassal eyes,
      Love in a soft amaze,
      I gaze, I gaze!

                               III
Who now, with greedy looks, eats up my feast?
   What stare outfaces now my silver moon!
   Ah! keep that hand unravished at the least;
      Let let, the amorous burn -
      But, prithee, do not turn
The current of your heart from me so soon.
      O save, in charity,
   The quickest pulse for me!

                               IV
Save it for me, sweet love! though music breathe
   Voluptuous visions into the warm air,
Though swimming through the dance's dangerous wreath,
      Be like an April day,
      Smiling and cold and gay,
A temperate lily, temperate as fair;
   Then, Heaven! there will be
      A warmer June for me.

                                 V
Why, this - you'll say, my Fanny! - is not true:
   Put your soft hand upon your snowy side,
Where the heart beats; confess - 'tis nothing new -
      Must not a woman be
      A feather on the sea,
Swayed to and fro by every wind and tide?
       Of an uncertain speed
      As blow-ball from the mead?

                              VI
   I know it - and to know it is despair
To one who loves you as I love, sweet Fanny!
Whose heart goes fluttering for you everywhere,
      Nor, when away you roam,
      Dare keep its wretched home.
Love, Love alone, has pains severe and many:
      Then, loveliest! keep me free
      From torturing jealousy.

                              VII
Ah! If you prize my subdued soul above
   The poor, the fading, brief, pride of an hour,
   Let none profane my Holy See of Love,
      Or with a rude hand break
      The sacramental cake;
Let none else touch the just new-budded flower;
      If not - may my eyes close,
      Love! on their last repose.

These things said, Keats's poetry can be as exasporating and difficult, as it can be simple and beautiful; for it takes us to the mythological, to places that most of us are unfamiliar with, all of which, I hope to be able to give expression to in the forthcoming blogs.

Tuesday 10 August 2010

"Summer"

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In the past and under the title: "Not quite a coffee morning", I have written about the poetry meeting that I attend each month. The last was in July, and having missed the meeting in June, I felt uneasy when I was told that the theme for our next meeting was, "Summer"; a a topic so deceeptively simple as to be positively dangerous.

Well proud of my home-made computer index: "Poems by Author", that over several months required hours of tedious work, I was well placed to tap into the theme, and in so doing, I passed bye: Fleur Adcock; W. H. Auden; George Barker; William Blake; John Clare; Idris Davies; Michael Drayton; Emily Dickinson; Goethe; Thomas Hardy, Seamus Heaney; and Nathan Mark Wilks Call, before settling for this: "When summer took in hand the Winter to assail". By Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey; this poem belongs to the sixteenth century, and when I came across it, I knew at once that this was what I had been looking for. But along the way, I was tempted by: Fleur Adcock, Seamus Heaney, and Thomas Hardy; and surprisingly, not at all by John Clare, an agrarian poet if ever there was one, but about whom I still have to make up my mind, though some consider him to be England's - Robert Burns.

What drew me to Fleur Adcock's poem: Summer in Bucharest, was the fact that it has nothing to do with summer, but instead, is a metaphor for political oppression; and it is sufficiently clear, and at the same time obscure, as to allow endless scope for the imagination. Though in saying this, I must warn you that this poem is included in a compilation by the Poetry Society, under the title, "Poetry On A Plate"; and it is indexed under Puddings.

See what you think:

We bought raspberries in the market;
but raspberries are discredited:

they sag in their bag, fermenting
into a froth of suspect juice.

And strawberries are seriously compromised:
a taint - you must have heard the stories.

As for the red currants, well, they say
the only real red currants are dead.

(Don't you believe it: the fields are full of them,
swelling hopefully on their twigs,

and the dead ones weren't red anyway
but some mutation of black or white.)

We thought of choosing gooseberries,
until we heard they'd been infiltrated

by raspberries in goosberry jackets.
You can't tell what to trust these days.

There are dates, they say, but they're imported;
and its still too early for the grape harvest.

All we can do is wait and hope.
It's been a sour season for fruit.
__________

Now though I have read a significant number of poems by Seamus Heaney, I have been careful to given him a wide berth; that is, not allow him to get up close, for fear that the magnetic pull in his use of words, might cramp my style, and my poetic voice, (such as it is), lost. A situation not helped either by some tenuous links:  he was at secondary school with my older brother Kevin, and we had a mutual friend in Sean Armstrong. Sean was a family friend, whom I knew, though not especially well, but when he last called at the house the visit ended with a number of us, Sean included, going off to The Londonderry, a Bar owned by another family friend, for a drink. From the liberal wing of Ulster protestantism, Sean, as Seamus Heaney reminds us, took a bullet through the forehead when he answered the door to a stranger: the price he paid for his involvement in cross-community work in strife-torn Belfast. He had travelled widely, and married a girl from Japan, and he didn't have to be a social worker; he could have been successful in any number of careers. In, A Postcard From North Antrim, and in so far as any man can be, Sean is "immortalised" by Seamus Heaney; and the essence of what made him who he was, is captured instantly, in the opening stanzas, in which we are confronted with the image of Sean standing, "alone" and "half afraid" on Carrick-a-Read: rope bridge: a local landmark that stands as a metaphor for the society that made him who he was:

A Postcard from North Antrim
       In memory of Sean Armstrong

A lone figure is waving
From the thin line of a bridge
Of ropes and slats, slung
Dangerously out between
The cliff-top and the pillar rock.
A nineteenth-century wind.
Dulse-pickers. Sea campions.

A postcard for you, Sean,
And that's you swinging alone,
Antic, half-afraid,
In your gallowglass's beard
And swallow-tail of serge:
The Carrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge
Ghost-written on sepia.

Or should it be your houseboat
Ethnically furnished,
Redolent of grass?
Should we discover you
Beside those warm-planked, democratic wharves
Among the twilights and guitars
Of Sausalito?

Drop-out on a come-back,
Prince of no-man's land
With your head in clouds or sand,
You were the clown
Social worker of the town
Until your candid forehead stopped
A pointblank teatime bullet.

Get up from your blood on the floor.
Here's another boat
In grass by the lough shore,
Turf smoke, a wired hen-run -
Your local, hoped for, unfound commune.
Now recite me William Bloat,
Sing of the Calabar.

Or of Henry Joy McCracken
Who kissed his Mary Anne
On the gallows at Corrnmarket.
Or Ballycastle Fair.
"Give us the raw bar!"
"Sing it by brute force
If you forget the air."

Yet something in your voice
Stayed nearly shut.
Your voice was a harassed pulpit
Leading the melody
It kept at bay,
It was independent, rattling, non-transcendent
Ulster - old decency

And Old Bushmills,
Soda farls, strong tea,
New rope, rock salt, kale plants,
Potato-bread and Woodbine.
Wind through the concrete vents
Of a border check-point.
Cold zinc nailed for a peace line.

Fifteen years ago, come this October,
Crowded on your floor,
I got my arm round Marie's shoulder
For the first time.
"Oh, Sir Jasper, do not touch me!"
You roared across at me,
Chorus-leading, splashing out the wine.

__________

Now the poem that I might have chosen from Seamus Heaney, was: The Summer Of Lost Rachel, in which the voice in the poem, against a backdrop of fruitfulness and abundance of life, has a longing, "To run the film back", beyond the point of the, "twisted spokes" and "Awful skid marks..."

This sense of the passage of time, and change in all of us, that is not necessarily apparent to others, is to be found also in the poetry of Thomas Hardy; and in the context of our meeting, I was minded to go with: This Summer And Last. In this short poem, Summer is personified, to the extent that it has to listen to the provocative voice of a bragging lover:

Unhappy Summer you,
      Who do not see
What your yester-summer saw !
   Never, never will you be
      It's match to me,
   Never, never draw
Smiles your forerunner drew,
   Know what it knew !

Divine things done and said
      Illumined it,
Whose rays crept in to corn-brown curls,
   Whose breezes heard a humorous wit
      Of fancy flit. -
   Still the alert brook purls,
Though feet that there would tread
   Elsewhere have sped.

So, bran-new summer, you
      Will never see
All that yester-summer saw !
   Never, never will you be
      In memory
   It's rival, never draw
Smiles your forerunner drew,
  Know what it knew !
_______________

Now the question that I hope is exercising you, is this: If I had all these options to choose from, why did I settle for the sixteenth century, and a poem by Henry Howard Earl of Surrey? : a young man from Norfolk, favoured at the court of Henry VIII, but who later was executed on a spurious charge of treason.

Well among the various reason that I gave to the group for choosing this poem, was its antiquated use of language, language that takes us beyond the norm, and that however different from what we are used to, has its own charm.

As it stands, this poem is a moral tale, about unrequited love and the consequence of failure; and a warning to all those who might venture into these treacherous waters. Depressed, through the dark months of winter, the voice, with the arrival of summer, is loath to go outdoors, even though his instinct is telling him that it is the thing to do. But venturing out, his spirits are revived by the sense of space, freedom and abundance in nature that is everywhere about him; and in particular, in the birds singing and happily building their nests. In this changed mood he gives thanks to God and is repentant for having blamed Him for his misfortune. But once back indoors his state of melancholy deepens, so that he sees his woes as increasing, and God, (who out-of-doors was merciful), as still angry with him, for what he calls "my rebell".

Now the words "As it stands" are important, for the only thing that we can be absolutely certain of, is that the story as told is about unrequited love and its consequences in this case. But given that it was written by Henry Howard, who, like Sean Armstrong, was cut down in the prime of life, it can reasonably be argued, as it was at the poetry meeting, that this poem is a metaphor for life, that for all of us, is complex and uncertain.

On paper the poem has the appearance of a monologue; and as published it is not indented, the indentations are mine, as a means of dividing it into manageable sections. And an interesting aspect of the rhymed endings is when we come to lines 5 and 6; "stir" and "dore" don't rhyme, but in the sixteenth century the word door (as we spell it now), when pronounced, may have had more of an "r" sound to it, in which case it would have rhymed with "stir". And among the many things that I like about this poem, (not withstanding uncertainty in the hyphenated words), are the dialogue that the voice engages in with itself; the change of pace and mood, i.e. the expressions of almost childish delight, where the voice out of doors exclaims "Lord, to myself how glad I was that I had gotten out". But the poem is more sophisticated than that, in that words that we would expect to be descriptive of winter, "force" and "might" become attributes of summer, that triumphs, over winter's "stormy blasts." : -

   When Summer took to hand the Winter to assail
With force of might and virtue great his stormy blasts to quail,
And when he clothed fair the Earth about with green,
And every tree new garmented, that pleasure was to seen,
Mine heart gan new revive, and changed blood did stir
Me to withdraw my winter woes that kept within the dore.
   "Abroad," quod my desire, "assay to set thy foot
Where thou shalt find a savour sweet, for sprung is every root;
And to thy health, if thou were sick in any case,
Nothing more good than in the spring the air to feel a space.
There shalt thou hear and see all kinds of birds y-wrought
Well tune their voice with warble small, as nature hath them taught,"
   Thus pricked me my lust the sluggish house to leave,
And for my health I thought it best such counsel to receive.
So on a morrow forth, unwist of any wight,
I went to prove how well it would my heavy burden light.
And when I felt the air so pleasant round about,
Lord, to myself how glad I was that I had gotten out!
   There might I see how Ver had every blossom hent,
and eke the new bethrothed birds y-coupled how they went,
And in their songs, methought, they thanked Nature much
That by her licence all that year to love, their hap was such,
Right as they could devise to choose them feres throughout;
With much rejoicing to their Lord thus flew they all about.
   Which when I gan resolve, and in my head conceive,
What pleasant life, what heaps of joy, these little birds receive
And saw in what estate I, weary man, was brought
By want of that, they had at will, and I reject at nought:
Lord, how I gan in wrath unwisely me demean!
I cursed love, and him defied: I thought to turn the stream.
   But when I well beheld he had me under awe,
I asked mercy for my fault that so transgressed his law:
"Thou blinded God," quod I, "forgive me this offence:
Unwittingly I went about, to malice thy pretence."
Wherewith he gave a beck, and thus methought he swore:
"Thy sorrow ought suffice to purge thy fault, if it were more."
   The virtue of which sound mine heart did so revive
That I, methought, was made as whole as any man alive.
But here I may perceive mine error, all and some,
For that I thought that so it was, yet was it still undone;
And all that was no more but mine empressed mind,
That faint would have some good relief of Cupid well assign'd
   I turned home forthwith, and might perceive it well,
That he aggrieved was right sore with me for my rebell.
My harms have ever since increased more and more
And I remain, without his help, undone, for ever more.
A mirror let me be unto ye lovers all:
Strive not with love, for if ye do, it will ye thus befall.

_______________

© Cormac McCloskey

Sean Armstrong was murdered on 29th June 1973, one of 263 people to die that year.

"Ver" = Spring.; "hent" = taken hold of, i.e., brought out every blossom "feres" = companions, mates.

Summer in Bucharest, by Fleur Adcock
from, Scanning The Century
         The Penguin Book of the
         Twentieth Century in Poetry
         ISBN 0-67-088011-6

A Postcard from North Antrim, by Seamus Heaney
from,The Faber Book of Contemporary Irish Poetry
        ISBN 0-571-13761-X

This Summer And Last, by Thomas Hardy
from The Works of Thomas Hardy
Publisher: Wordsworth's Poetry Library
ISBN 1-85326-402-4

"When Summer took to hand the Winter to assail"
by Henry Howard Earl of Surrey
from Silver Poets Of The Sixteenth Century
        Publisher: Everyman
        ISBN 0 460 87440 3