John Keats As A Sensuous and Romantic Poet: Keywords: Romanticism, Sensuous, Beauty, Ode, Nature
John Keats As A Sensuous and Romantic Poet: Keywords: Romanticism, Sensuous, Beauty, Ode, Nature
John Keats As A Sensuous and Romantic Poet: Keywords: Romanticism, Sensuous, Beauty, Ode, Nature
ISSN : 2581-9925, Impact Factor: 6.340, Volume 03, No. 02(III), April - June, 2021, pp.226-228
Geeta Gupta
ABSTRACT
John Keats was an English Romantic poet who lived during the 19th century. In his short-lived life
he faced many ordeals and had to witness of death and suffering that shaped him as a poet and reflects in
his work. It is in his poetry that many of the themes, motifs, and ideas that have since come to be
associated with Romanticism came into full fruition. Keats' is development of ideas commonly associated
with the core philosophical tenets of Romanticism is shown to be pervasively evident in the following poems:
Endymion, Ode on a Grecian Urn, and Ode on a Nightingale Etc.
Assistant Professor, Department of English, Vaish College, Rohtak, Haryana, India.
Geeta Gupta: John Keats as a Sensuous and Romantic Poet 227
Sensuousness: Means something that has to do with our five senses. Sensuousness is that
trait of poetry which influences our five senses i.e., hearing, seeing, touching, smelling and
tasting. Sensuous poetry appeals to our senses.
As a Romantic Poet: In “Ode to Autumn,” I do agree with this statement however I do feel
there are some far more important and more widely used romantic ideals in his poems than the
strange and the dream however sensual is a very important feature that runs through all of his
Odes whether it is describing beauty of art in Urn or nature in Autumn he uses sensual
language in all of his Odes and that is the main thing that makes the reader ask questions. John
Keats used language, technique and style that Romantic Movement required in poetry.
As a Sensuous Poet: Keats uses incredibly sensual language to illustrate how he is feeling
and what he is imagining which gives the odes a sensual feeling of being alive. In Keats' "Ode
to Autumn" he is using a large amount of sensual language to try and take us to the place in his
mind, his choice of words are hugely important for making Autumn a sensual Ode. His poetry
makes us hear, see, smell, taste and touch the object he describes.
The poetry of Keats is characterized by ‘sensuous’ uses of language. The sensuousness of
Keats is a striking characteristic of his entire poetry. All his poems including his great odes contain rich
sensuous appeal. The odes, which represent the highest poetic achievement of Keats, are replete with
sensuous pictures. Now, we will discuss his sensuousness with examples of his various Odes and
poems in detail.
‘Ode to Nightingale’
“Ode to Nightingale” is one of the most remarkable poems of sensuousness. In the second
stanza of this ode, there is a description of the gustatory sensation of drinking wine. There are references
to the visual and auditory senses too. The poet also paints the picture of a drunken whose mouth is
purple stained because of the red wine he has drunk:
“With beaded bubbles winking at the brim,
And purple-stained mouth,”
In ‘Ode on a Grecian Urn’ Keats’ senses reflected:
Heard Melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter,
Therefore, yet soft pipe play on,
Not for the sensual ear, but more endeared,
Pipe to the spirit ditties of no tone
Here John Keats describes the sense of hearing. The speaker is tempted by the eternal
newness of the piper's unheard song. Here in these lines shows that Keats had a unique gift of
communicating with senses. The sense in his poetry is so deep that Louis MacNeice calls him
“Sensuous Mystic.”
Keats heard a Nightingale’s song in the garden and compose a poem ‘Ode to the Nightingale’ to
inspire. The most sensuous odes of him when heard the song of a Nightingale:-
The happy Queen-Moon on her throne
Clustered around her starry fays
But there is no light…….
Beauty was the creed of Keats, so he escapes in to the world of beauty away from the work- a
day world of weariness. He says:
Beauty is truth, truth beauty…..
In the sense of sight John Keats also describes beauty and says:
Her hair was long, her foot was light
And her eyes were wild……
In the sense of touch he says in his poem ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’:-
The sedge is withered from the lake
And no birds sing.
In the sense of Smell Keats describe beauty of Nature:
228 International Journal of Education, Modern Management, Applied Science & Social Science (IJEMMASSS) - April - June, 2021