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Friday, 27 January 2017

Mythology in Keats' "Ode to Autumn" and "Ode to Psyche"

John Keats (1795-1821) was an English Romantic poet and was one of the main figures of the second generation of Romantic poets, along with Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley, despite his work having been in publication for only four years before his death. The poetry of Keats is characterized by sensual imagery, most notably in the series of odes.

The Romantic poets, and especially John Keats, were deeply influenced by ancient Greek mythology. Keats deeply studies and consciously or unconsciously imitated the Greek classics in his works. His poems, “Ode to Grecian Urn”, “Ode to Psyche”, “Endymion”, “Ode to Autumn”, etc show a remarkable influence of Greek mythology. “Ode to Psyche” and “Ode to Autumn” are two of the odes belonging to this series of poems. Both these poems are similar in Keats’ use of mythology in them, though in different forms.

"Ode to Psyche" is a 67-line poem written in stanzas of varying length, is written to a Grecian mythological character, displaying a great influence of Classical culture. The mythological elements in this poem are more prominent as compared to “Ode to Autumn” as the poem itself centers on the mythological figure, Psyche, Cupid’s wife. This poem is an explicit example of Keats’ use of classical myths in his poems. According to this myth, Psyche was the youngest and most beautiful daughter of a certain king and queen. Her beauty was such that her admirers went as far as prayer to her and making her offerings, consequently ignoring the Greek Goddess of Love, Aphrodite (or Venus, the name her Roman counterpart is known by). Venus thus sends her son Cupid (or the Greek Eros) to make Psyche fall in love with a hideous creature. However, Cupid accidently manages to prick himself with his arrows and falls in love with Psyche.  Meanwhile, Psyche’s parents consult and Oracle who informs them that their daughter would fall in love with a dangerous dragon-like creature. So, she is taken to a cliff where the West Wind carries her away and deposits her on a meadow. She starts living in the castle she sees there, where she is treated like a queen, and has a husband who only visits her n the darkness of the night and whose face she is yet to see. Sometime later, Psyche’s two sisters come to visit her. When she came to know about her predicament, they advice her to light a lamp after her husband has fallen asleep so that she can see his face as they truly believed him to be a monster. When Psyche carried out the plan, instead of facing the monster that she was expecting, she discovers that her husband is none other than Cupid. In her surprise, she drops hot oil from her lamp onto Cupid, who wakes up to the betrayal of his wife and leaves her. Later on, after much wandering and many a difficult task where she had to prove herself, Psyche and Cupid are finally reunited.

The poem, “Ode to Psyche” opens with Keats proclaiming his wishes to be Psyche’s priest as she is the most beautiful but least worshipped Goddess. She has neither any altar to her name with any flowers, nor a choir to sing for her, or even a prophet praying upon her. Keats says that he wishes to be her priest and would also build a shrine for her “in some untrodden region of my mind”. With the help of the myth of Psyche, Keats displays the Romantic idea of the power of the mind. He worships her and wants to be her priest. He, however, does not want to build any physical temple for her. Rather, he dedicates a special place in his mind for the admiration and worship of Psyche’s unparalleled beauty. Interestingly, the term “psychology” has its roots in the Greek word “psyche”, which translates to “mind” or “soul”, and Keats’ rendering of the myth reinforces the power of one’s mental capabilities to see beauty in the outer world.

“Ode to Autumn”, on the other hand, contains only implicit hints at mythological allusions that can be grasped only by an intelligent and curious reader. Held in regard as undoubtedly the most beautiful poem by Keats, Keats’ use of subtle mythological allusions in this poem shows a certain maturity in his writing style. Unlike in his poem, “Ode to Psyche”, here the mythological elements are only present in the second stanza. Keats personifies autumn as a female figure and draws an image of four women engaged in different activities typical to autumn. Two o these images alludes to myths. The first image is that of a woman “sitting careless on a granary floor, / Thy hair soft lifted by the winnowing wind;” this image immediately brings to the mind of a learned reader a painting of Psyche separating grains on a granary floor as a part of a task that her mother-in-law Venus assigns her to prove her worth. The second image is that of a woman “on a half-reaped furrow sound asleep / Drows’d with the fume of poppies”. To the unsuspecting reader, this is a picture of a woman reaping poppies who has fallen asleep by the intoxicating effects of the flower. But a well-read person learned in the study of myths will immediately invoke the myth of Ceres (Demeter) upon the mention of poppies. Ceres is the Roman Goddess of Earth, harvest and fertility, and is often worshipped with the poppy flower. According to the myth regarding this, Demeter’s daughter, Persephone, was abducted by the God of the Underworld, Hades (or Pluto). In her grief, Demeter was wandering when she came across a peasant whose son was mortally ill. Demeter cured this sick boy with poppies, and thus she is worshipped by offerings of poppies. In this poem, Keats uses myths to invoke the active participation of the reader in discerning the myths.

Thus it is seen that both “Ode to Psyche” and “Ode to Autumn” contain a substantial amount of Greek allusions. One might be more subtle in its use of classical Greek myths than the other, but it undoubtedly is present in both poems, and thus shows the reader Keats’ love for myths.