‘Universal’ Context Within the Selection of Keats’s Poems
Romanticism and the Value of Human Experience
The poem reflects a Romantic concern with subjective experience, but
presents consciousness as unstable and difficult to sustain. The speaker
begins in a state of ‘drowsy numbness’ [Line 1], as if he had ‘drunk’
[Line 2] hemlock, suggesting a blurred boundary between awareness and
oblivion.
This instability continues throughout the poem, culminating in the question
‘Was it a vision, or a waking dream?’ [Line 79], which foregrounds the
uncertainty of perception. Rather than offering a coherent account of
experience, the poem presents consciousness as fluctuating and
unreliable.
Keats, therefore, constructs a vision of experience that is intense but
unstable, resisting clear interpretation or resolution.
Transience, Mortality, and the Pressure of Time
The poem foregrounds the inevitability of suffering and death within
human life. The human world is characterised by ‘weariness, the fever,
and the fret’ [Line 23], where ‘youth grows pale ... and dies’ [Line 26],
suggesting that vitality and beauty are inevitably destroyed by time.
In contrast, the nightingale is described as ‘immortal’ [Line 61], its song
transcending generations. However, this apparent permanence is
ambiguous, as it may be an imaginative projection rather than an
objective reality.
The poem, therefore, constructs a tension between human transience and
imagined permanence, without resolving whether transcendence is
genuinely attainable.
Sensuous Experience and the Overwhelming Nature of Perception
The poem is richly sensuous, but this sensuousness contributes to
instability rather than clarity. The imagined ‘draught of vintage’ [Line 11]
that tastes ‘of Flora and the country green’ [Line 13] blends multiple
senses, creating an immersive but disorienting experience.
Later, the speaker moves through darkness, where he ‘cannot see what
flowers are at [his] feet’ [Line 41], and must rely on smell and
imagination to construct the scene. This shift suggests that perception is
partial and unreliable.
Keats, therefore, presents sensation as something that intensifies
experience while simultaneously destabilising it.
Escapism and the Limits of Imagination
A central movement in the poem is the desire to escape human suffering.
The speaker initially considers intoxication, wishing to ‘fade far away,
dissolve, and quite forget’ [Line 21], before turning instead to
imagination, declaring that he will fly ‘on the viewless wings of Poesy’
[Line 33]. This progression suggests an increasing reliance on internal,
rather than physical, forms of escape.
The poem draws on classical mythology in its attempt to construct this
imaginative transcendence, invoking figures such as ‘Flora’ [Line 13],
‘Bacchus’ [Line 32], and the ‘Dryad’ [Line 7]. These references evoke a