By David GosselinThe question has been raised by many critics, academics, scientists, and artists, “What is Creativity?” In the spring of 1819, the poet John Keats experienced one of the greatest bursts of creativity in the history of art and science. When fully considered, the astounding poetic achievements of the spring of 1819 parallel Einstein’s celebrated “miracle year” of 1905. Just as Einstein revolutionized our very idea of the universe, overthrowing the linear conception of time and space, Keats opened new vast vistas into the domain of the creative imagination and its power to capture truth. 1819 might rightly be considered Keats’s “miracle year.” To appreciate the nature of Keats’s creative breakthroughs fully, it is necessary to dispel a popular belief that certain academics insist on keeping alive: that Keats was a Romantic poet.[1] Contrary to their interpretation, the nature of the Great Odes was anything but Romantic.[2] Romanticism was obsession with pretty descriptions of an idealized sensual world and the titillating effects that such descriptions could arouse in the audience. While like the Romantics Keats availed himself of lush and natural imagery, his use of such imagery represented a universe fundamentally different from the one inhabited by the Romantic poets. William Wordsworth and the Romantic school in general contented themselves by simply entertaining the senses with pleasant imagery. In his Preface to Lyrical Ballads, the universally acknowledged manifesto of Romantic poetry, Wordsworth was explicit about his intention of wanting to keep the reader in the company of “flesh and blood,” that is, to avoid higher forms of metaphorical ideas and paradoxes, which challenge human beings to venture beyond what they could simply touch, taste, hear, see, or smell:
However, Wordsworth himself recognized the limitations of his brand of poetry:
Had Keats simply been another poet of the Romantic school, he would have embraced Wordsworth’s view of poetry. Had this been the case, the Odes would have never been possible. For Keats, poetry represented the creative agency by which he could transcend the very limits defined by the contemporary view of poetry and art, the limits of the senses, and a purely mortal sense of identity. In this respect, “The Ode on Indolence” is a perfect entry point for exploring Keats’s celebrated miracle year because the subject of the ode is the process of creativity itself. Keats describes, or more precisely takes us through his own process of wrestling with creative inspiration and becoming the instrument of what he refers to as his “visions.” It flies directly in the face of the popular literary practices of aspiring writers today who often lack genuine inspiration or ideas to write about, those busying themselves with “writing prompts” and self-help styled articles that might sound something like, “7 Great Steps to Having a Productive Writing Day” or “How to Find Inspiration When You Have None.” Rather than a manual or step-by-step guide to writing, Keats discovers an awakening of his creative powers by confronting one of the greatest paradoxes of the human condition: our mortality. Confronting one’s mortality is something that any truly creative person must do if they are to fully develop and sustain their gifts. Keats thus becomes one of our greatest allies in discovering and unfolding our own creative potential. He does this by taking the reader through his own creative process and getting him to relive the kinds of paradoxes Keats had to confront within himself in order to give birth to the ideas whose uttered expression came to be known as the Great Odes. The “Ode on Indolence” begins with a visitation by three mysterious shadows which seem to have leapt off a Grecian Urn.[3] Keats does not initially recognize the figures, though he highlights their familiar Greek attire, their “placid sandals” and “white robes.” One morn before me were three figures seen, Keats was in a dream-like state, and failed to recognize those familiar figures—figures which he accuses of leaving “without a task my idle days.” Keats tells us how “The blissful cloud of summer indolence benumbed my eyes,” and a result his “pulse grew less and less; Pain had no sting, and pleasure’s wreath no flower.” He is essentially describing a state in which the senses have been numbed to the point of being effectively dead. But is this a literal death? Take the famous passage by Socrates in Plato’s Phaedo dialogue:
Is the philosopher described by Plato one who longs for a literal death? Were this the case, then such a philosopher might simply look for the closest bridge and jump off. The truth is that Plato was a poet, and as a poet, he takes the idea of death as it is generally known and elevates it to the level of a poetic metaphor. It compels us to conceive of what is left once all the senses or sense-perceptions have fled. For one whose identity is generally anchored in sense perceptual things, his possessions, his environment, et cetera, the metaphor of death is very threatening. But is this not what opens the door to a proper investigation of things beyond any direct sense perception, such as the human mind, creativity, that which persists beyond our mortal selves, in which we may yet participate? Is the “nothingness” to which Keats refers, then, truly nothing in the sense of emptiness devoid of all experience, or is it that all the typical obstacles that assail us in our mortal condition have all vanished? What happens when all the typical things that we have become accustomed to being assailed with on a daily basis suddenly disappear? Rather than dwell on those questions, let us attempt to understand Keats’s meaning by seeing what happens on the other side of this “nothingness”: A third time pass’d they by, and, passing, turn’d The figures in question, whose identities had remained unknown at the end of the second stanza are now revealed. They are the figures Keats had become so acquainted with in his quest for earlier poetic success, figures which he writes about in his sonnets on fame and his famous “When I Have Fears”: They faded, and, forsooth! I wanted wings: The great irony lies in the fact that these passing shadows—Love, Ambition, and Poetry—are presented as impediments to the kind of experience he hopes to have. In his desired state of “nothingness,” Keats experiences what he calls “visions,” things unimpeded by the intervening sense-perceptions of the world, such as “the sound of busy common sense” and “how change the moons.” He is no longer concerned with the pursuit of achievement, poetic fame, or success, or even with the desire for being loved. Rather than chase after poetry, he is ready to let poetry find him. Keats has abandoned all earthly desire, both noble and superficial. As a result, all earthly desires and concerns have abandoned him. He calls this state “blissful indolence.” In “blissful indolence,” Keats is unfazed by the hopes, fears, desires, or concerns of daily life: And once more came they by:—alas! wherefore? Suddenly, Keats describes the kinds of rich experiences that find him: his sleep is “embroider’d with dim dreams”; his soul is a “lawn besprinkled o’er with flowers, and stirring shades and baffled beams.” Suddenly the music, the “throstle’s lay” finds him, and poetry becomes as natural as leaves on a tree. Keats is completely indifferent to the intruding figures that had caused him so much consternation in the past. So, ye three Ghosts, adieu! Ye cannot raise Even the greatest poet cannot simply sit down and compose as if by some regimented habit. The poet will never find poetry, poetry must find him. But in what state will poetry find him? When does poetry visit the poet? Is it in times of great ambition and egotistical hopes of fame and praise and glory? The most profound creativity emerges from an intense and impassioned feeling which longs to communicate something that lies beyond what we can simply touch, taste, hear, see, and smell; it is located deep within the soul, beyond the grasp of the senses. The process of digging deep into one’s soul, and struggling to bring such passions into the real world, to “name” them, is arguably one of the most difficult challenges any mortal faces. It also parallels the process of discovery any great scientist must go through in order to develop a hypothesis, which the universe will accept. The “Ode on Indolence” is a timeless account of the emotional process the poet must experience to be capable of receiving the inspiration Keats calls “visions.” But what to him were visions, the world over now knows as the Great Odes. The Rising Tide Foundation is a non-profit organization based in Montreal, Canada, focused on facilitating greater bridges between east and west while also providing a service that includes geopolitical analysis, research in the arts, philosophy, sciences and history. Consider supporting our work by subscribing to our substack page and Telegram channel at t.me/RisingTideFoundation. Notes: [1] David B. Gosselin, “Why John Keats Is Not a Romantic,” The Chained Muse, October 29, 2018. [2] Daniel R. Leach, “John Keats’ ‘Great Odes’ & the Sublime,” The Imaginative Conservative, June 12, 2019. [3] The Chained Muse Poetry, “Ode on Indolence by John Keats,” YouTube, 4:25, May 3, 2019. This article was republished with permission of the author, who is the founder of The Chained Muse poetry website, which is dedicated to publishing and promoting 21st-century classical poetry. You're currently a free subscriber to Rising Tide Foundation. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Wednesday, September 20, 2023
Beyond the Lines: Keats’ “Ode on Indolence”
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