January 2009

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          The poem "Ode to the West Wind" directly conforms to Shelley’s
poetic creed. Poetry, Shelley writes in A Defence of Poetry, “…awakens
and enlarges the mind by rendering it the receptable of a thousand
unapprehended combination of thought. Poetry lifts its veil from the hidden
beauty of the world.” Consistent with this theory of poetc creation, Shelley’s
Romanticism is filled with vehement feelings, ecstatic, mournful, passionate,
desperate or fiercely indignant. Sometimes this turns inward to talk about
himself. It is in this that he is unique among the Romantics—looking for a
better world of liberty, equality and fraternity in his idealistic project of
life. For this, he is seen to be pessimistic about the present but highly
optimistic about the future to come.


         
The wind is itself a powerful and recurrent Romantic metaphor. But in
Shelley’s treatment it is not a “correspondent breeze”. It is rather ferocious
in its energy, and because of the ferocity the wind becomes a vast impersonal
force, which the poet needs as a symbol of both destruction and creation. Herein
lies the importance of the wind as the metaphor for revolutionary social
change.


         
In the very first stanza West Wind appears with a restless
anthropomorphizing energy –a “breath of Autumn’s being”—to blow away the dead
leaves. Here Shelley breathes life into the metaphor of dead leaves by
inverting the words not just for the sake of rhyme but to make us see that the
leaves are really dead, and therefore, resemble ghosts. The poet takes another
breath and recasts the metaphor:


                        “…O thou


                        Who chariotest to their
dark wintry bed


                        The wing’d seeds, where
they lie cold and low,


                         Each like a corpse
within its grave.”


The intricate set of correspondence
reflects the unquestioned assumption that as far as the trees are concerned
Spring will come. We get both major phases of dying and rebirth, in equal
weight, with the phase between them confined to a dream.


        If
the stanza one is about earth, stanza two is set in air, in the “steep sky”.
Clouds resemble leaves and water; air and water which jointly produce clouds
must then resemble trees, whose boughs, entangled by the storm shake off their
leaves. The point is that the Wind is everywhere and it does the same kind of
operation everywhere. It destroys the dead and preserves the living. The second
image, about the Maenad, in part, restates the first.


         
The third stanza is divided into three long sentences carrying the
movement across the line with a gentle rocking caused by enjambments and the
brilliant use of a trochaic footat the beginning of  “crystalline streams”. Here the realm of the
ruling West Wind is the sea, both the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, and both
the surface and the vegetation beneath. Shelley here charmingly personifies the
Mediterranean, which perhaps in its sleep is dreaming of the emperors’ palaces
tottering and falling into its water, though all is now peaceful, before the
Wind comes. This may be easily taken for allusions to Shelley’s hope for
political change in Italy, for the collapse of the kings and kingdoms.


          
As the scene shifts to the Atlantic, the somnolent summer yields to the
ruthless autumn. We move not only to the Atlantic, where its smooth surface has
turned into a deep waves, but under it, where we find woods and foliage
despoiling themselves of foliage upon hearing the Wind’s voice.


          
The fourth stanza begins somewhat the way Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony
begins, by briefly recapitulating the themes of the first three movements. Now,
the Wind is seen in the fourth stanza in relation to the poet himself:


                       “If I were a dead leaf
thou mightest bear;


                         If I were a swift
cloud to fly with thee.”


Shelley erupts in Romantic agony,


                         “Oh! Lift me as a
wave, a leaf, a cloud!


                          I fall upon the
thorns of life! I bleed!”


He longs to be invaded by the fierce spirit of
the Wind and cleaves with it to become,


                          “…through my lips to unawaken’d earth


                           The trumpet of my
prophecy!”


At last he is optimistic of the future and
closes the poem with a prophecy:


                            If Winter comes,
can Spring be far behind?”




It is not only a prophecy but also a cry to the
world to be renewed, awakened and reinvigorated. As we know it is usually
spring that awakens the earth, but he chose the wind of autumn deliberately for
the obvious purpose to convince that he is not forcing the natural world to his
own mould, but that the poem is occasioned by a specific moment and he is
observing the process of rebirth as being naturally preceded by the destruction
of the old unregenerate world. Symbolically, he is seeking a better world, a
new life to replace the . thus the wind of autumn is a perfect symbol of moving
and cleansing power, an evidence in the natural world what is poignantly
missing in the human.              









"Porphyria’s Lover", under the name
Porphyria, was first published in a magazine named Monthly Repository.
It appeared again in Dramatic Lyrics together with "Johannes
Agricola in Meditation". It is significant that both the poems
were published under the common title "Madhouse Cells". Taking the
same format of octo-syllabic lines, like the other ‘madhouse’ poem, Porphyria’s
Lover opens with an ironic discrepancy between the speaker’s statement and the
real meaning. But the poem is much more complex than Johannes Agricola,
where the issue of motivation is concerned. Like Agricola, Porphyria’s lover
describes a supposedly natural course of action, which is, on introspection,
illogical. Where Agricola rejects the authority of the Gospels, Porphyria’s
lover breaks one of God’s Ten Commandments that,


          “Thou shall
not kill.”    
The Old Testament,
‘Exodus’ 20: 13.


The
lover does so by perpetrating a murder. Again, the title of the poem alludes to
a physiological condition—‘Porphyria’, strongly reminiscent of the term
‘porphyrin’ in biochemistry, refers to congenital abnormality in pigmentation.
In the context of Browning’s poem the term suggests a link between physical and
mental abnormality. 


         


          The opening lines are evocative of a
fierce and malicious natural force, which is illuminated later on in the poem:


                    “The rain set early in
to-night,


                              The
sullen wind was soon awake,


                     It tore the elm-tops down for spite,


                              And did its worst
to vex the lake:”


   If one is particularly watchful, then the
‘elm-tops’, which have been torn down, signals death and presages Porphyria’s
terrible destiny. The storm outside bears some correspondence with mental
disorder that provokes the lover. Here ‘rain’ and ‘storm’ are personified as
agents of destruction. Yet, while depicting this violently animated nature, the
lover perfectly sane and his speech proceeds clearly and logically, so that
these disturbing detail take on their full significance only in retrospect.
Browning was sufficiently well versed in contemporary psychological theories to
know that a spurious rationality is a mark of madness. Porphyria’s lover
establishes a false sense of causality and motivation. He moves from thought to
action in a manner that strikes him as perfectly reasonable.





His narrative, frequently couched in monosyllabic words,
enumerates Porphyria’s every move and look in a carefully controlled manner.
Entering the cottage she ‘‘kneeled and made the cheerless grate/Blaze up, and
all the cottage warm”. At this point it must be said that the reader cannot be
sure of what kind of woman Porphyria is. The speaker either carefully avoids
disclosing her true identity or finds it psychologically troublesome to do so
like a confirmed psychiatric patient since it is an unpleasant fact. What his
speech betrays—“vainer ties dissever”—makes her identity and position in the
society all the more equivocal. We cannot be sure whether she was a married
woman or not. One thing is, however, clear that she belonged to the higher
stratum of society than the speaker.


 Symbolically
Porphyria’s rekindling of the fire serves as a commonplace figure for the
lovers instantly aroused desires. Welcoming her passion and worship of him,
which he responds with ‘surprise’, the lover debates his force of action:


          “…I found


          A thing to
do, and all her hair,


          In one long
yellow string I wound


          Three times
her little throat around,


          And strangled
her.”


At
this divided point in the poem, it becomes clear for the first time that the
abnormal lover is recounting step by step the history of a sexual murder. We
realize now with a shock that this a very recent event since he now rests
against Porphyria’s corpse. For him the dead Porphyria becomes a property
‘gained’. Yet nothing has been gained except a lifeless body.




His speech concludes with his equivocal contemplation of the
empty silence, in which “God has not said a word”. He anticipates God’s
judgement. This may, on the one hand, strike a note of comfortable expectation;
on the other, we may choose to think that the lover is expecting his relief of
God’s wrath. It is to decide between these divergent reading. It is, in fact,
the uncertainty about the lover’s final state of mind that prompts us to
consider closely the brief and violent history that constitutes the poem. The
reader’s sole interest rests on the motive of the man—what exactly compelled
him to perpetrate the ‘deed’. 





Drawing upon the personal experiences of his own life and the Platonic
theory of anamnesis, Wordsworth in his ode "On Intimations of
Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood" presents such a typical
theme, which can easily be generalized as a Romantic cry over the loss of
innocence, and of the splendour that goes with the vision of innocence.
Wordsworth’s originality lies in the poetic transformation of the theme, and
the poetic treatment also gives human touch to a deep philosophical problem.
While discussing the process of the birth of Particular (human) Soul from the
Universal Soul, Plato said that the human soul undergoes a change, and that
there occurs the forgetting (anamnesis) of the Supreme Beauty and Goodness and
Truth of the Universal Idea, which it descends from.


Wordsworth’s approach to the problem is, however, different. He begins in
a tone of profound regret at the loss of visionary splendour, which seemed, in
retrospect, to have invested so many scenes of nature in his childhood. He says
that during his childhood the world appeared to him,


          “Apparelled in celestial
light


          The glory and freshness of
a dream.”


Here it should be remembered that dreams are precious evidence of an
activity, which is now impossible in the normal condition of adult wakefulness.
Wordsworth’s insight here is in complete accord with Freudian and Jungian
psychological theories of the mind. They insisted that in the waking state the
ego’s censorship of fantasy takes over there a cognisance of space and time, of
probability and of cause and effect. According to Freud, dreams can involve a
considerable degree of “primary process of thinking”. This kind of mental
activity can be found in the babies who are not where their own selves end and
the outer world begins. As he develops into an infant and changes to “secondary
process of thinking”, the small child still has the regression into “primary
process of thinking”, taking refuge in fantasy form the realities of the
world.   Gradually the attention to the
outside world comes to dominate the conscious waking mind in a process exactly
traced by Wordsworth:


          “Shades of prison-house
begin to close upon the growing Boy...”


          At the time Wordsworth
began the Ode, he had on several occasions recalled “that Golden past”. But
instead of wishing to “travel back”, like Vaughan in the 'Retreat' , he
had accepted his lot philosophically. Reflections showed him that his childhood
experiences were not lost, and that his imagination had developed from the
dreamlike and visionary state to a philosophical stage. He could now feel,


          “My heart is at your
festival,


          My head hath its
coronal…” 


But the problem was profound one and until it was solved Wordsworth could
not resume the 'Recluse' confidently, as the main idea in planning it had
been the belief that man could be redeemed only by holding “fit converse with
the spiritual world” through Nature. After writing the first four stanzas he
left the remaining part unfinished nearly for two years. It seems that for
quite sometime he groped for the answers to the agonising questions:


“Whither is fled the visionary gleam?


Where is now, the glory and the dream?”


Wordsworth found the answer in Plato’s theory of transmutation of the
soul. Platonic theory of pre-existence is, however, fanciful and possibly a
borrowing from Coleridge. According to this theory, the soul can vividly
remember its prenatal existence in heaven during childhood because its
separation from heaven is a comparatively recent phenomenon. The best that can
be said about this Platonic theory is that it provides a logical explanation
that integrates the poem, and that he gave great imaginative appeal to it. But
he was never happy with it and said, “It is far too shadowy”. The mundane
answer that follows is reasonable though rather commonplace. It suggests that
the child gradually becomes part of the world as a foster nurse slowly but
surely wean him away from heaven. The child travels the further from heaven the
more he begins to imitate the elders. But Wordsworth, while criticising the
child’s habit of imitating and thereby inviting the weight of custom, “Heavy as
frost, and deep almost as life”—also asserts that in moments of calm even the
mind of an adult can in imagination travel back to childhood, the fountainhead
of all our light, and


          “…see the Children sport
upon the shore


          And hear the mighty waters
rolling evermore.”


          But this is not the
recompense, which reconciles Wordsworth to the loss of childhood vision. The
recompense that he speaks of is two-fold: recollection of childhood, which
proves that man’s life is all of a piece, and that “The Child is father of the
Man”; and the “philosophical mind”, which can look on Nature with an awareness
of human life, especially its tragedies. That is why he finally pronounces:


          “Thanks to the human heart
by which we live,


          Thanks to its tenderness,
its joys, and fears,


To me the meanest flower that blows can give


Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.”




Wordsworth means that to a mature and philosophic mind actually conscious
of the transience of earthly realities even the slightest object becomes a
precious and cherished possession.      



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