Explore the ways in which
Keats depicts power in ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’
Jess
Cornelius
Keats represents power in an ambiguous way in ‘La Belle
Dame Sans Merci’. Although Keats uses a traditional ballad form, used to depict
the story in the most archaic way possible, the way he depicts powerful people
are not commonplace of those who were powerful in his time – for example, the
Knight is portrayed as being weak and lonely while the kings, princes and
warriors are ‘deathly pale’. The fact that the beautiful woman the narrator
describes who ‘shows no mercy’ is interesting because although she is the
supposedly most powerful in the poem, she is a mysterious character who cannot
be translated easily in the poem – we are unaware of who she truly is and why
she has such a powerful effect on the hapless knights, kings, princes and
warriors. At the time, Keats was experiencing his own conflicts that perhaps
created the foundation of the poem. For example, Keats was said to have been
‘on fire poetically, in love, growing ill and suffering from depression’. Keats had begun to show symptoms of
tuberculosis after nursing his brother, which could have possibly influenced
the weak portrayal of the knight and of the dying, bleak and ‘withering’ scene
that is portrayed in the first stanza.
Keats begins ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’ with a question
and response form in order to structure the narrative. In this question and
response ‘interrogation’, we begin to get an idea of where this narrative is
set and captivate the supposedly difficult situation the knight has found
himself in. Because the narrator’s questions to the knight ‘oh what can ail
the, knight – at – arms’, are repeated in the first two stanzas, we are
constantly reminded of the dire situation the knight is in and how hopeless and
powerless he is. The question also becomes pitying the second time it is used,
because we as the reader are aware of how at odds this knight is within society
and how unlike a knight he is due to the adjectives and nouns used such as
‘alone and palely loitering’, ‘so haggard and so woe-begone’.
The repetition of the words and phrases used in the first
two stanzas are also used in the last stanza, such as ‘alone and palely
loitering’ and ‘the sedge has withered from the lake’ not only creates a
cyclical structure in the poem but it suggests the incapability of the
powerless to move forward or to escape anything. Those who are powerful, which
in this case is ‘a lady’ who is ‘fully beautiful’ entraps ‘pale kings … pale
princes…and pale warriors’ on a ‘cold hill side’. From this, we can infer that only those who
possess beauty, who are ‘full beautiful’ are the most dominant, while those who
lack this sense of beauty and majestic power only become powerless like those
‘on the cold hill side’, who are ‘death – pale…starved lips in the gloam’.
Keats also represents power and control by the way he
structures the poem and the rhyme scheme he uses. For example, although Keats
uses a traditional ballad with the traditional quatrain to appropriate the form
to its medieval story, Keats controls
the way in which the sentences are structured to move the narrative forward. He
alternates between tetrameters & trimeters which creates an almost ‘sing –
song’ pace, however Keats compresses the lines by using three tetrameters
followed by a final short line of 5 or 4 syllables therefore hastening the
poem’s rhythm. He does this to cause disruption in this natural ‘sing song’
flow of the poem, reflecting the disruption that is experienced by the knight. As a result of this, stanzas 1, 2 and 13 sound
more abrupt such as ‘no birds sing’, ‘and the harvest’s done’, gives us a sense
of the knight’s fate. We get an vivid image of desolation and we as the readers
feel as though we can almost ‘see through the eyes’ of the knight – we feel a
sense of loneliness, helplessness and vulnerability as the setting gives us the
sense of the predicament of the knight. By
controlling the rhythm, Keats highlights the disruptions the Knight faces in
this poem which subsequently makes him less powerful – for example the fact
that he is ‘alone and palely loitering’ and ‘so haggard and woe-begone’ gives
us the image that he is lost and lacks control in a unknown place suggesting
that he is a weak knight.
It also important to note that when the mysterious lady
appears, rhyme appears to become more constant, evolving into more of a full
rhyme than some of the half rhymes that are used such as ‘loitering’ and ‘sing’
and ‘begone’ and ‘done’ when the knight is the main focus in the narrative. When
the lady is the main focus of the narrative in stanza 4 appears, rhyme seems to
become more constant and Keats begins to use full rhymes more frequently, such
as ‘child’ and ‘wild’, ‘dew’ and ‘true’ and ‘all’ and ‘thrall’. This highlights
the power this mysterious lady has over the knight who is ‘alone and palely
loitering’, a deliberate technique Keats uses in order to make the lady seem
like an enchantress and something of the supernatural – for example she is
described as being a ‘faery’s child’ and living in an ‘elfin grot’ as well as
being able to ‘lull’ the knight to sleep- this portrayal of the lady makes her
seem subhuman – she lacks human characteristics but she possesses magical or
supernatural powers that makes her powerful.
However, the way in which Keats chooses certain
characters to depict them as being powerful is not stereotypical and is unusual
for his time. From the very beginning to the very end of the poem we are almost
disappointed by the knight because he does not show any heroic actions which we
would expect from a knight – even when he does appear to show a little more
power in stanza 5 by making ‘a garland for her head’, and therefore essentially
objectifying her, she is still more powerful not just to the knight when he is
‘lulled to sleep’ but also to the atmosphere of the poem – we as readers almost
forget the miserable bleak scene, as ‘no birds sing’ and the ‘sedge has
withered from the lake’ which is being described at the start of the poem
because in her presence things seem to be ‘fragrant’ and ‘floral’. Not only
that, but the fact that this lady has the ability to entice the most powerful
and the most elite who are all terrified of the lady when they cry ‘La Belle
Dame Sans Merci/Hath the in thrall!’ makes her seem not only the most powerful
but it intimidates us as the readers.
The poem demonstrates a parallel between the Knight’s
situation and Keats’ conflicts with the pains of love. It could therefore be
said that the lady is symbolic for this love and subsequent pain Keats had
felt - Keats is the knight who ‘meets’
the lady (or in his own life, has fallen in love) and as a result comes into conflict
with the pains of love (paralleling with the knight’s own difficult situation
when he is left on ‘a cold hill side’ and is ‘alone and palely loitering’). This is demonstrated in an extract of a
letter from Keats to Fanny Brawne, his fiancée, when he was living in the Isle
of Wight – he says ‘if the remembrance
of you did not weigh so upon me I have never known any unalloy’d Happiness for many days together: the death
or sickness of someone has always spoilt
my hours’. Keats had experienced much grief and sadness in his turbulent life –
for example, his father’s sudden death and his mother’s subsequent marriage two
months later, followed by both his mother’s and brother’s death from tuberculosis
meant that ‘death or sickness of someone’ had ‘always spoilt’ his life. If this
is the case, and if the lady is supposed to be symbolic of love, then Keats is
trying to tell us that love is much more dangerous than grief. It has
captivated and destroyed the ‘pale kings…princes … and warriors’ and had left
the knight, weak and vulnerable therefore somewhat unheroic as he himself is
destroyed by ‘love’ or the lady. As a result, we can infer that Keats’
experience with love in his life is more destroying than the griefs of sickness
and death in his life, therefore making love a more powerful, more stronger
emotion, something that Keats in his own life was experiencing himself.
Well done Jess. You have worked really hard at this and you are making great strides with Keats. Now see if you can focus more on the sound qualities of his wods. 'alone and palely loitering' uses the repeated 'l' sound to link the words with connotations of weakness and isolation to create a sense of excessive sensuality and defeat for the knight, possibly his fatal flaw...
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