Keats as an escapist narrate main characters or theme of Ode to a nightingale

 Characters or theme  of Ode to a nightingale

characters or theme  of Ode to a nightingale


“Fade far away, dissolve, and quite forget

What thou among the leaves hast never known,

The weariness, the fever, and the fret

Her, where men sit and hear each other groan;

  

These lines from “ode to nightingale’’ are quite significant to authenticate the saying that john Keats is an escapist. Keats being very torn up with sorrows and sufferings of his existence on earth longed flee with nightingale in its melodious plot to get rid of his toiling moments. Riding in the viewless wings of posy, Keats competes and contrasts the sad, grim reality of life with the ideal and pleasant world of the nightingale. Most of his odes are a treasure trove of conflict, the basic conflict was on the choice between the real world and the ideal world that he created by his imagination, the other points of conflicts are pleasure and pain, beauty and cruelty, happiness and melancholy and the transient as well as the permanent. But his romantic plight gets condolence at the end that earth, though full with trouble and toil is the just place for living and human being after momentary escape has to come back to reality.

 

“Ode to a nightingale’’ shows very clearly the comparison and contrast between the happiness and immortality of the bird and the misery and mortality of human life. The poem opens with the melancholic tone of the poet,

“My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains

My sense as though of hemlock I had drunk,

Or emptied some dull opiate to the drains

One minute past, and lethe-wards had sunk.’’

 

The song of the nightingale is so appealing to the poet that provides him balmy relief to his agonies. It becomes a symbol of everlasting joy to him and smells him narcotic release from his pain. The song brings him excessive joy, in its excess, the joy turns into joyous pain the nightingale’s ecstatic song reminded him of the pain that man has to face in real life. He would like to avoid this pain with the help of his poetic imagination. The poet expresses his deep desire to run away with the viewless wings of poesy from the fever and fret of life and to escape into the trees where he can forget life’s sorrows and misfortunes from which the nightingale is quite free. He wishes to forget the fatigue, the depressing and tiresome conditions of life and the anxieties and cares of the world.

 

The imaginative world of the nightingale is free from all sorts of agonies. In his imaginative forest where the nightingale is singing, he finds all the sensual enjoyments of his life. In the darkness of the forest, he could sense the fragrance and the flowers everywhere. The whole atmosphere is pervaded by the sweet smells of various pleasant flowers contrasting with the unpleasant realities. John Keats was so overwhelmed with the tranquil air of the imaginary world that he wanted to embrace death in this situation as he is in an ecstatic mood. As he was surrounded by happiness and beauty.


The association of ideas lead to poet now to think of immortality; he contrasts his mortal life with the permanence of the nightingale though nightingale is a mortal bird, its singing is immortal. The voice of the nightingale that the poet hears today was heard in the ancient time by Emperors and clowns fairy wizards and captive maiden.

“ Magic casements, opening on the foam

Of perilous seas, in fairy lands forlorn’’

The word `forlorn’ brings the poet pack from the ideal world to the world of reality. The singing of the nightingale fades away and becomes inaudible altogether. He then bids farewell to the nightingale and the world of beauty and realizes the truth of life. His romantic fancy transported him into this world of beauty. But when he comes back to himself and remembers the realities of life. Again he realizes that fancy cannot help us long. It can captivate us and make us forget reality for a short while but it cannot solve the reality of life.


So, in Keats masterpiece ode to nightingale we find a dynamic tension between the real world of human beings and the ideal world of nightingale. The human world is portrayed as full of cruelty, diseases, unhappiness, unpleasantness, and mortality, on the other hand, the ideal world of the nightingale is presented as ideal, floral, pleasant, carefree, and immortal. Instead, the poet could not remain for a long time to the dreamy world, to the world of fancy. Therefore, imagination may have some influence to offer momentary relief from the pain of life but it has no everlasting control over wooing the pain forever.

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