Monday, 21 August 2017

Ode On A Grecian Urn

Ode On A Grecian Urn
Written by John Keats 

Poem


Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness,

Thou foster-childof silence and slow time,
Sylvan historian, who canst thus express
A flowery tale more sweetly than our rhyme:
What leaf-fring'd legend haunt about thy shape
Of deities or mortals, or of both,
In Tempe or the dales of Arcady?
What men or gods are these?What maidens loth?
What mad pursuit?What struggle to escape?What pipes and timbrels?What wild ecstasy?

Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard

Are sweeter: therefore, ye soft pipes, play on;
Not to the sensual ear, but, more endear'd,
Pipe to the spirit ditties of no tone:
Fair youth, beneath the trees, thou canst not leave
Thy song, nor ever can those trees be bare;
Bold lover, never, never canst thou kiss,
Though winning near the goal-yet, do not grieve;
She cannot fade, though thou hast not thy bliss,
For ever wilt thou love, and she be fair!

Ah, happy, happy  boughs!  that  cannot shed

Your  leaves, nor  ever  bid the  spring  adieu;
And, happy  melodist, unwearied,
For ever  piping  songs for  ever  new;
More  happy  love!  more  happy, happy  love!
Forever  warm  and still  to be  enjoy'd,
Forever  panting, and for  ever  young;
All  breathing  human passion far  above, That  leaves  a  heart  highsorrowful  and clo y'd,
A burning  forehead,  and a  parching  tongue.

Who are  these  coming  to  the  sacrifice? To what  green altar, O  mysterious priest, Lead'st  thou that  heifer  lowing  at  the skies,

And all  her  silken flanks with garlands drest?
What  little  t own by  river  or  sea  shore, Or  mountainbuilt  with peaceful  citadel,
Is  emptied of  this folk, this pious morn? And, little  town, thy  streets for  evermore Will  silent  be;  and not  a  soul  to tell
Why thou  art  desolate, can e'er return.

O Attic  shape! Fair  attitude!  with brede

Of  marble  men  and maidens overwrought,
With forest  branches and  the  trodden weed;
Thou, silent  form, dost  tease  us out  of  thought
As doth eternity: Cold Pastoral!
When old age  shall  this ge neration waste, Thou shalt  remain, in midst  of  other  woe Than ours, a  friend to  man, to whom  thou say'st,
"Beauty  is truth, truth beauty,"that  is all
Ye  know  on earth, and all  ye  need to know.

About the poet :
John Keats (31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) was an English Romantic poet. He was one of the main figures of the second generation of poets, despite his works having been in publication for only four years before his death aged 25 in the year 1821.he had become one of the most beloved of all English poetsThe poetry of Keats is characterised by sensual imagery, most notably in the series of odes.

Introduction:

 In Ode  on  a Grecian  Urn, Keats  addresses  the  titular  urn,  “the  bride  of  quietness’,  whose beauty  and  purity  cannot  be  violated  by  time. Taking  us  to  the  enchanting  and  mysterious scenes of  Greek pastoral life engraved on the urn, he  exalts  on  how art  confers  permanence  on  beauty. Generations  will  pass,  but  the  urn  will  remain,  whispering  this  eternal  truth,  consoling  and inspiring  humanity.

Ode

It is a kind of poem devoted to a particular subject or a praise of a person, animal, or thing. It is written in varied or irregular metre with an elevated style and often expresses deep feeling or thought of the poet.

Summary of the first stanza:
The poet stands before an ancient Grecian urn and addresses it.  He is preoccupied with its depiction of pictures frozen in time.  He expresseshis sense of wonder through a string of questions. Keats calls the beautiful urn the“still unravish’ed bride of quietness”, the “foster childof silence and slow time”. He also calls it “sylvan historian”because the pictures on the urn are able to tell their stories more beautifully than any poet can.It tells the tales of gods and men inTempe or the valleys of Arcadia in Greece.  He wonders about the figures on the side of the urn and asks what legend they depict and from where they come.  He looks at the picture that seems to depict a group of men pursuing a group of women and wonders what their story could be: “What mad pursuit? What struggle to escape? What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?

Summary of the second stanza;

The poet looks at another picture on the urn, this time of a young man playing a pipe, The poet feels that heard melodies are sweet but those unheard are sweeter.  This means that imagination is more powerful than reality.  The piper on the urn will go on playing on the pipe forever because art has immortalised him.  His tunes are meant for the spiritual ear. Then he sees a fair youth beneath a glade of trees with his lover. Keats consoles the bold lover who is about to kiss his sweet heart saying that he should not grieve because her beauty will never fade  and she will be young forever.

Summary of the third stanza :

The poet looks at the trees surrounding the lovers and feels happy that they will never shed their leaves. The trees can never bid farewell to spring because eternal spring will keep them happy forever. The piper will go on piping ever fresh melodies without feeling weariness. The lovers on the urn will keep on loving.  The passions experienced by the lovers in the pictures are above real human emotions.  Human passions end up in sad satiety whereas the love depicted on the urn will remain fresh and young forever.

Summary of the fourth stanza :

The poet now turns to a scene of a ritual, an animal sacrifice on a pagan altar.  A heifer being led by a priest to the altar is lowing at the skies. He wonders where they are going and from where they have come.  He imagines the empty streets of their little town.All the people have gone to the sacrifice.  The streets of the town will be silent and desolate forever, for those who have left it, frozen on the urn, will never return.

Summary of the last stanza :

The poet again addresses the urn itself.  The urn is Greek and looks beautiful.  The marble urn is embroidered with human figures, branches and grass.  He says that the urn diverts us away from rational speculation and it does not yield to thought. Like eternity it too cannot becomprehended in rational terms.  He thinks that when his generation is long dead, the urn will remain, telling future generations its enigmatic lesson. “Beauty is truth, truth beauty.”  This is the great message of the urn to mankind.

Theme

1. Time
2. Art
3. Experience 
4. Love
5. Mortality and immortality 

Answer the following in two or three sentences.

1.Why does the poet address the urn as the “foster child of silence and slow time”?
The urn is the “foster child of silence and slow time” because Time ,which is actually a destroyer,but here it, kept the urn safe and preseved the urn for a long time without any damage. That is why it is called time's foster child.

2.How has the urn become a “Sylvan historian”?

The urn is addressed as Sylvan historian because the scenes engraved on it are of Greek rustic life.

3. “Heard  melodies  are  sweet,  but  those unheard  are  sweeter”.    Explain .

In these lines Keats means  that imagination is more  powerful  than  reality. Through the  melodies  of reality  are  sweet  but those  which  remain in imagination are sweeter.

4. How are the persons  and  nature  engraved  on  the  urn  superior  to  their  counterparts  in  reality?

The  persons  and  nature  engraved  on  the  urn  are  superior  to  their  counterparts  in  reality  for  art  has bestowed  immortality  on  them.    The  piper  will  go  on  piping  ever  fresh  melodies the  trees  will ever  be  green  and  the  lovers  will  keep  on  loving  and  ever  be  young  and  fair. But  in  reality  this  is not  possible.

5. How is the passion  experienced  by the  lovers  in  the  picture  different  from  real  human  passion?

The  passions  experienced  by  the  lovers  in  the  pictures  are  far  above  real  human  emotions. Human passions,  in  reality,  may  end  up  either  in  satiety  and  disgust,  or  in  intense  sorrow  whereas the  love  depicted  on  the  urn  will  remain  fresh  and  young  forever.

6. Can  you see the streets of  the  deserted  town  in  the  picture?  Where  do  they exist?

We cannot  see  the  streets  of  the  deserted  town  in  the  picture.   Looking  at  the  picture  of  a  sacrifice on  the  urn,  the  poet  only imagines  the  empty streets  of  the  deserted  town.

7. How does  the  Gre cian  urn  affect  our thoughts?

The urn  confuses  our  thought  like  a  riddle.

 8. What does the urn  symbolise?

The urn  symbolises  immortality  and  eternal  beauty.

9. What contradictions  are  merged  in  the urn?

The  inner  contents  of the urn  is mortal  remainings of  a  human  being.    But  the  pictures  engraved on  its  outer  surface  symbolise  the  immortality  and  permanence  of  art.    These  are  the contradictions  merged  in  the  urn.

10. What message does  the urn  convey to  humanity?

The Urn conveys a great message to humanity is that ‘Beauty  is  truth,  truth  beauty”

Answer in a paragraph of not  more than 100  words 

1. Comment  on the  three  scenes engraved on the  urn.  How  do they  appeal  to the  poet?
 The  first  scene  that he  encounters  on  the  urn  is  that  a  group  of  young  men  chasing  women and of some  musical  instruments. Looking  at  this  scene  he  wonders  about  the  figures  on the  urn  and  asks  what  legend  they  depict  and  from  where  they  come. 

The second scene is that of a young man playing a pipe, The poet feels that heard melodies are sweet but those unheard are sweeter.  This means that imagination is more powerful than reality.  The piper on the urn will go on playing on the pipe forever. Then he sees a fair youth beneath a a trees with his lover. Keats consoles the bold lover who is about to kiss his sweet heart saying that he should not grieve because her beauty will never fade  and she will be young forever.


The third scene  on  the  urn that  of  a  sacrifice  and  an  assemblage  of  men and  women.    The  poet’s  imagination  goes  beyond  the  actual  scene  represented  on  the  urn. He  imagines  how  the  town  from  which  the  people  have come  to  attend  the  sacrifice,  must be  forever  in  desolation.    All  these  three  pictures  on  the  urn  bring  out  the  immortality  and permanence  of  art.


2. How  does  Keats  brings  out lover  and his the  contrast  between  art  and  life through  the  picture  of  the  bold sweetheart?
 Keats  looks  at  the  picture  of  the  bold  lover  and  his  sweetheart  engraved  on  the  urn.  The lover  is  about  to  kiss  his  sweetheart.    Even  though  he  cannot  kiss  his  lover,  the  poet  says that  he  should  not  grieve  because  her  beauty  will  never  fade and  she  will  be  young  forever. The  bold  lover  who  is  about  to  kiss  his  sweetheart  reminds  Keats  of  the  transience  of human  life  and  the  permanence  of  art.    The  passions  experienced  by  the  lovers  in  the pictures  are  above  real  human  emotions.    Human  passions,  in  reality,  may  end  up  either  in satiety  and  disgust,  or  in  intense  sorrow.    Keats  contrasts  the  transience  of  human  joy  with the  permanence  of  art.

3. Comment on the words and phrases by keats celebrates the urn as the symbol of enternity?

In "Ode on a Grecian Urn," Keats finds eternity in the beauty of art. The phrase "beauty is truth,truth beauty" they are both identical. Art immortalizes beauty and here beaty is truth. The images carved upon the urn, is of ancient life have been given immortality. This immortality, however, is not entirely a blessing. Describing a picture of two lovers, Keats strikes a balance between the positive and negative aspects of eternal existence
In one way, they are perpetually young and love never knowing any sorrow. On the other hand, they cannot kiss, to fulfill the promise of their lives. Knowing no sorrow, the lovers' joy is ultimately meaningless, for happiness can only be experienced in contrast to suffering. Recognizing this fact, Keats shows how man's impossible quest for immortality manifests itself in art. Seeking to achieve permanence, we create images that will carry on through time. These images must ultimately fall short of the real world. Though art may surpass man chronologically, it never actually lives, and hence can only mimic the true essence of human existence.
4. "Beauty is truth, truth beauty',that is all /ye know on earth, and all ye need to know" Explain ?
Beauty is truth, truth beauty": the circular form of the aphorism recalls the pattern of Keats's reasonings but now this circularity has a restrictive value. The equation is valid only within the limits of the imaginary world of art. That is why the aphorism is qualified by a fresh restriction: "that is all / Ye know on earth." This clause would of course be meaningless if Keats had regarded the urn's message as a final lightening of "the burthen of the mystery." "All / Ye know" refers back to lines the poet tried to reach truth through beauty, and was led, in the attempt, to confess the incapacity of thought to discover the meaning of life, its inability to conceive a satisfactory connection between time and eternity. The only truth we may hope to reach on earth is that which is offered by the urn, the truth in beauty, the beauty which may yet be a substitute for truth. "All ye need to know"  But though beauty and art have kept their consolatory function, they no longer provide an answer to the mystery of life. What the urn expresses is rather the position of the "negative capability" letter: let us accept, since we must, the limitations of human knowledge. One of the ironies of literary fame is that the Ode should so often have been read as a manifesto of unqualified Aestheticism: for it does not say that beauty is the refuge of those who do not think, but the comfort of those whom thought has bruised.

5. Comment on the pictorial quality of keats poetry with reference to the 'Ode on the grecian urn '?

Keats is unique for his sensuousness and pictorial quality. The Ode on a Grecian Urn contains a series of sensuous pictures—passionate men and gods chasing reluctant maidens, the flute-players playing their ecstatic music, the fair youth trying to kiss his beloved, the happy branches of the tree enjoying an everlasting spring, a priest, who is seen leading a heifer to the sacrifice on some green altar, The town is painted as situated near the river at the foot of a hill and on top there is a fortress, etc all these imagined life is more real and made a physical embraces. The whole of the poem is a remarkable one for its pictorial effects.
Keats is more poet of sensuousness than a poet of contemplation. It is his senses which revealed him the beauty of things, the beauty of universe from the stars of the sky to the flowers of the wood. Keats's pictorial senses are not vague or suggestive but made definite with the wealth of artistic details. Every stanza, Every line is full with sensuous beauty. No other poet except Shakespeare could show such a mastery of language and felicity of sensuousness .    
Write an essay  of 300  words.
1. “Forever  will  thou  love,  and  she  be  fair”.    Discuss  the  central  theme  o with  reference  to  this  line.

Ode  on  a  Grecian  Urn is  one  of  the  most remarkable  poems  by  the  great  romantic, John Keats.  The  central  theme  of the poem is beautifully described in the line  “Forever will  thou  love,  and  she  be  fair” which conveys the transience of human life and the permanence of art. Keats  addresses  the urn whose  beauty  and  purity  cannot  be violated  by  time.    He  is preoccupied  with its  depiction  of  pictures  frozen  in  time.   It  is  the  “still  unravish’d  bride  of quietness”,  the  “fosterchild  of  silence and slow  time”.   He  also  describes  the  urn  as a  “historian” that  can  tell  a  story.    There is  a  series  of  pictures  engraved  on  the urn. series  of activities  among  which Keats focuses.
The scenes  depicted  are one,  a  festival, singers  and  young  men  chasing  shy maidens;  two,  an  amorous  scene  of courtship  with  a  youth  in a  gesture  of fulfillment;  and  the  last,  a  scene  of sacrifice  with  a  priest,  a  heifer  and people  in procession  to  an  imaginary altar. He  looks  at  the  picture  which seems to depict  a  group  of  men pursuing  a group  of women and  wonders  what  their story  could  be.
The  poet  then  looks  at  another  picture on  the  urn,  of  a young  man  playing  a pipe,  lying  with  his  lover  beneath  a glade of  trees. He  says  that  the  piper’s unheard melodies  are  sweeter  than  mortal melodies because they  are  unaffected  by time. The lover  is  about  to  kiss  his beloved.  
The  poet  tells  the  young  lover that, though  he  can  never  kiss his  lover because  he  is  frozen  in  time,  he  should not  grieve,  because  her beauty  will  never fade. The  lover  depicted  on  the  urn would  always  be  loving,  without  feeling the anguish  of love  of  real  life. The  piper on  the  urn  will  go  on  playing  on  the pipe  forever him.   His  tunes  are  meant for  the  spiritual ear.  The because art  has immortalised poet  looks  at  the  trees  on the urn  and  says  that they  will  never shed  their  leaves. The  trees  can  never bid farewell  to  spring  because  eternal spring will  keep  them  happy  forever. All  these pictures  bring  out  the  vital  difference between  life and  art.
Life has  the vividness and  warmth  of reality,  but  it  is subject to change  and decay, whereas  art is  the unchanging expression  of  beauty. The other  picture engraved  on  the  urn  is that of  a  sacrifice and  an  assemblage  of men and women.  A priest  is  leading  the heifer to  the sacrifice.
The  poet imagines how the  town  from which  the  people have come  to  attend the sacrifice must  be forever  in desolation. The fact  is  that the people  in  the  picture are bound  to  their place  and  thus  made immovable by art.
Keats concludes the  poem  by  conveying the  urn’s  message  to  mankind “Beauty  is truth, truth  beauty”.   Beauty  and  truth are not  two  different  things;  they  are identical.   Art  immortalizes beauty,  which in  its  turn,  consoles  man.

2. Trace the evolution of thought in the poem that leads to the conclusion that the urn will beat time and remain a friend to generations of humanity? 

The poem begins with the narrator's silencing the urn by describing it as the "bride of quietness", which allows him to speak for it using his own impressions. The urn is an external object capable of producing a story outside the time of its creation, and because of this ability the poet labels it a "sylvan historian" that tells its story through its beauty. The melody accompanying the pursuit is intensified in the second stanza. The unheard song never ages and the pipes are able to play forever, which leads the lovers, nature, and all involved to be immortal.
Then keat's focus is moving from the urn's ideal world and its joy and beauty to the ironic implications of the legend and the pain and truth of reality. And his next vision is not on the urn at all. Rather, it imaginatively extends the marble legend to include the unseen town from which the figures on the urn have come.
This lifeless and ultimately deceitful urn beat time and remain afriend to generations of humanity. The answer lies in what the urn says to man at the end of the poem.
Keats recognizes that the urn is an alluring thing of beauty. Its happy pastoral scene is rich and inviting so the urn is a friend to man because of its totality—not its beauty alone, but also its implicit truth that a human being cannot live by beauty alone and still develop a soul. The beauty-truth equation is not mathematically exact. It is an equation of completion. Beauty does not equal truth, but the one cannot exist on earth without the other. Where there is beauty, there is also truth; where there is warmth, there is also cold; where there is joy, there is also pain and sorrow. It is significant that the poet reverses the equation as well, and the repetition is not wasted. If beauty is truth, if joy requires pain, then so is truth beauty and so does pain require joy. The poem, therefore, does not end with equivocation or with mere longing after an unattainable ideal. The meaning of the beauty-truth equation goes much deeper. 
Ultimately, the urn's message is a validation of the miseries of human life and an assertion that these miseries are necessary for attaining what Keats called "Soul." The equation may not be all that man needs to know on earth, but, properly understood, it is a great deal, and perhaps all that is necessary to make inevitable the process of Soul-making.

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