John Keat's
poems, On First Looking into Chapman's Homer, and On Seeing the Elgin Marbles
for
the First Time,
express an irresistible, poetical imagination. They convey a sense of
atmosphere to the
reader. In
comparison they exemplify his intense love of beauty. The connection between
these two
poems is not so
much in subject, but the feeling of awe. Both these poems show more emotion and
amazement in the
experience of discovering something new.
Keats looked with eyes of wonder at
new adventures
and expressed them verbally with delicacy and reserve.
In the poem On First Looking
into Chapman's Homer, the description of his experiences
overflows with
youth and excitement.
But as the poem
continues the writing is toned down to
convey the most
important and meaningful experience.
Keats describes how after traveling in lands
of gold, and
seeing many great states and kingdoms, he never truly realized the wonders of
these
things until
reading Chapman's translation of
Homer. Crossing many western islands
bards have
sung about, he
never was able to comprehend their true serene nature until reading man's
wondrous
words. This narration explains that though these were sights well
visited , their beauty and Keats
imagination kept
them alive. Having read Chapman's
translation til dawn with his teacher, he was so
moved he wrote
this his first great poem and mailed it by ten A.M. that day.
In On Seeing the Elgin Marbles
for the First Time, the description of his experiences overflows
with depression
and experience. As the poem continues
you see his sad point of view has faded .
It
gives it a
familiarity that hides its true serene character. He describes how his spirit is weak
(mortality)
and his wonderful
memories have faded in his mind due to worries and unrest at his coming
death.
It should be said
death does play a key role in this poem and is the main reason behind all his
dreariness and
heavy heart. His self-pity masks the
appreciation that he was granted this length of
time to even
experience them. Having viewed these time worn memorials of Grecian skill, in
this
poem he expressed
the indescribable feelings of wonder .
In
comparison Keats expresses similarities in his concreteness of
description in which all the
senses combine to
give the total comprehension of an experience (new or old). He writes with an
intense delight
at the sheer existence of things outside himself, and seems to lose himself in
his own
mortality and the
identification of the object he contemplates. His imagination is unleashed on
the
works of poetry
and art that so amazed him. Keats style of poetry speaks of truth in beauty.
His motto is
captured in a line of his own poetry -"A thing of beauty is a joy
forever."
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