“Ode to a Nightingale”
By: John
Keats
John Keats’s “Ode to a
Nightingale” begins with no introduction: The poet describes himself in a
profound state of mental torment, as if drugged into a sleep state, engrossed
in an unseen nightingale’s song. The setting is unspecified, but readers can imagine
the poet in a garden or perhaps in the woods, during springtime, when
nightingales nest. The poet addresses the bird directly, a poetic device known
as apostrophe, stating his admiration for the nightingale’s happiness. At this
point the nightingale suggests to the reader that it embodies, at minimum, two
symbolic meanings: The bird’s song suggests that the bird represents art, while
the poet’s description of the bird as being like a Greek wood nymph suggests
that the bird symbolizes nature.
In stanza two, the poet yearns
for an imaginative identification with the bird, perhaps assisted by wine, by
which he can escape the ordinary world and disappear into the happier world
represented by the nightingale. In stanza three, the bird’s world is contrasted
to all the pain—such as aging, disease, and despair—that defines human
experience. In line 26, Keats could be alluding to the death of his brother Tom
in 1818.
In the fourth stanza, the poet
rejects the escape that alcohol can provide, preferring the flight of poetry.
Overall, through his desire for symbolic union with the bird, stanzas two
through four outline the poet’s desire to escape the human condition. The...
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