La Belle Dame sans Merci, John Keats Flashcards
1
Q
Meaning
A
- Summary: Knight falls in love with mysterious young woman (or faery) who charms him but then leaves him alone & desperate to see her again
- Celebrations of ballad traditions, stories, classical literature
- Explores negative destructive effects of overwhelming love
2
Q
Discuss the 3 themes
A
- Reality/dream
- Can’t really tell when it switches from third person to knight’s POV
- Confusing/ambiguous shift in speakers
- Blurs lines between reality and dream
- Can’t really tell when it switches from third person to knight’s POV
- Power of love
- Knight is emitted and destroyed
- Rebellion against of love
- Universal pain of love
- Brutality of humanity
- Belle Dame abandons him without mercy
3
Q
Context
A
- Part of Romantic movement in poetry
- (Response to Industrial Revolution and the Enlightenment = sought beauty and wisdom in nature and emotion)
4
Q
Imagery #1
A
Floral Imagery
- Knight has “a lily on thy brow”
- Forehead = white as flower: lily
- Pale and possibly ill
- Lilies associated with death
- Suggestion of fear and mortality lingers
- Symbol of Virgin Mary
- Effeminises knight = make him seem womanly
- Complexion losing colour as “a fading rose fast withereth too” on his cheek
- Metaphor = roses symbolise love, but rose dying
- = knight’s love is abandoning him
- Ironically = poem about beautiful woman without pity = speaker is kind, concerned and sympathetic
5
Q
Imagery #2
A
“my pacing steed”
- Symbolically = knight gives fairy his manly power
- Setting fairy on his stallion = knight has raised her above himself
- Given her masculine power of horse & placed himself in position of servant/squire
- OR fact has to help her up, shows his dominance
6
Q
Tone
A
Elegiac, impassioned
- “on the cold hill’s side”
* Returned to conscious world = without his lover, feels that winter has come + has no purpose - Repetition: “Alone and palely loitering”
- Knights = warriors of medieval period
- Involed in noble mission to help someone vulnerable
- But here: without his horse
- Symbolically unmanned = lost vital part of his power
- “loitering”
- Waiting without a purpose
- Something a knight should never do
- Should be in mission to help others
- ∴ something dreadful must have happened to knight
- Waiting without a purpose
7
Q
Structure #1
A
Ballad
- Simple language & absence of detail
- Excludes information, don’t know what’s fantasy or real = don’t whose dream it is
- Lends poem ambiguity
- Typically invoke supernatural + themes of love
- ABCB rhyme scheme
- Narrative quality = storytelling
- Conveying dramatic romance of story effectively
8
Q
Structure #2
A
12 quatrains with iambic tetrameter rhythm
- 4th line of stanza ends on unstressed rather than stressed
- Ends on dull note = poem feels unresolved and sad
- Poem uses shorter 4th line in each stanza (dimetric)
- Incompleteness of narrative = no clear conclusion
- Abrupt, slightly ominous ending
9
Q
Comparisons 4x
A
- “Piano”
- “Sonnet 116”
- “The Tyger”
- “My Last Duchess”
10
Q
“Piano” Comparison
A
Both about power of much-loved woman to control a man
11
Q
“Sonnet 116” Comparison
A
Both offer different descriptions of love is
12
Q
“The Tyger” Comparison
A
Both depict a powerful and beautiful force which is beyond
nature & our control
13
Q
“My Last Duchess” Comparison
A
Offers different view of gender relationships in which man is the powerful one