Ironically, the Romantics were attempting to break trends and find a new way of life. They wrote in new forms, but the idea of revisiting a mystical past was irreplaceable. In his poetry, Keats simultaneously bleeds nostalgia and joy. Certainly, this is quite obvious in his vocabulary, where he vividly illustrates his happiness, but it is done with the same method of dramatizing the old world. In "Ode on a Grecian Urn," Keats scrapes the dust from ancient mythology, and immortalizes it with extreme detail. Stanza V stimulates the reader in this fashion, first addressing the urn as, "O Attic shape!" This tells the reader that the urn is from Athens, the jewel of the ancient Greek empire. Continuing on, it escalates the reader to realize that when the age of his or her own generation is lost, the Greeks will still be remembered for their Kleos, the thing each Greek hero desired, and that the ancient Greeks would continue to teach the pursuit of truth as the ultimate beauty.
Ad augusta per angusta,
Will
I have to say the fact that you pull on all the small details to find greater meaning to the text is commendable. The Greeks were onto something teaching that the pursuit of truth was the ultimate beauty. When truth is found it is a wonderful revelation. If only all would find The Truth, how things might be different. Truth seems to be a recurring theme in honors. I like it, we could take such a theme and just keep running with it because Truth is an absolute.
ReplyDeleteCommented on Lucy's "Schleier-mah-who?" post
ReplyDeleteI LOVE that everything ties together so well. Talk about a thread going throughout all of history and tying things together! Truth is certainly an Honors theme. I find it interesting that we've seen truth gained through several vehicles (i.e. suffering, beauty, memory, etc.)
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