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Thursday, March 7, 2019

Reading Response to Ode to a Nightingale

In Ode to a Nightingale Keats introduces the reader to his discontent with the void of feeling he is experiencing. In the offshoot enclosure Keats says how his, heart aches which the reader would interpret as throe however the cooperate half of the first line he describes, A drowsy numbness. This tells me that Keats is uncomfortable with the numbness he experiences. In the second line Keats says, as though of hemlock I had drunk. Norton floor notes tell us that hemlock is a poison that acts as a tranquilizer in mild doses.Sedatives cause a euphoria that could be described as drowsy numbness. In the first line Keats repeats the A sound with aches, and a drowsy numbness pains. In the second line Keats repeats the H sound with Hemlock I had drunk. This alliteration and assonance creates a sort of euphoric musical quality, provided emphasizing Keats chemically induced lack of feeling described. Continuing with the melodic theme of drug induced emptiness in the third line Keats sp eaks of close to dull opiate to the drains.Also continuing the use of assonance Keats repeats the D sound with emptied few dull opiate to the drains. Again the feeling produced by this repetition mimics the numb run of a high. However this line is still more obvious than the first two because Keats mentions opiate which is a much more well-known drug that produces a numb sort of euphoria. The fourth line of the poem introduces a juvenile dynamic to the first stanza. Keats says, Lethe-wards had sunk Norton tells us that Lethe is a mythological river in Hades that causes forgetfulness.With this line Keats intention in the first stanza can be expanded from a euphoric void of feeling to single that causes him to forget. Because of this and Keats later references to intoxication (see stanza 2) as well as references to death (see stanza 3) the reader could generalise that Keats desired the forgetful, euphoric, lack of feeling. Though Keats opens the poem in line one with My heart a ches one could debate just how much his heart authentically aches.

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