#Hyperion by John Keats
#Hyperion by John Keats
#Hyperion by John Keats
Hyperion” is an uncompleted epic poem by John Keats. It is based on the Titans and
Olympians, and tells of the despair of the former after their fall to the latter. Keats wrote
the poem for about one year, when he gave it up as having “too many Miltonic
inversions.” He was also nursing his brother Tom, who died in January of 1819 of
tuberculosis. Hyperion relates the fall of the Titans, elemental energies of the world, and
their replacement by newer gods. The Olympian gods, having superior knowledge and
an understanding of humanity’s suffering, are the natural successors to the Titans.
Keats’s epic begins after the battle between the Titans and the Olympian gods, with the
Titans already fallen. Hyperion, the sun god, is the Titans’ only hope for further
resistance. The epic’s narrative, divided into three sections, concentrates on the
dethronement of Hyperion and the ascension to power of Apollo, god of sun and poetry.
Book I presents Saturn fallen and about to be replaced and Hyperion threatened within
his empire. The succeeding events reveals the aftermath of the situation and the Titan’s
acceptance of defeat after Oceanus’ speech. In Hyperion, the quality of Keats’s blank
verse reached new heights, particularly in the opening scene between Thea and the
fallen Saturn:
“Deep in the shady sadness of a vale,
… Sat gray-hair’d Saturn, quiet as a stone”
Many themes introduced in the Hyperion are identifiable as those associated with
Romanticism. Hyperion, which marks the exchange of the old powers for the new,
addresses ideas about poetry, beauty, knowledge, and experience. Hyperion’s
dominant themes address the nature of poetry and its relationship to humanity and the
sublimity of human suffering the knowledge gained through it. The narrative suggests a
thematic consideration of progress, particularly toward enlightenment and depictions of
beauty, even as it evokes classical ideals found in Greek mythology. Visual and verbal
representations, in the use of language and of Greek sculptural forms, contribute to this
exploration. Through his representation of gods, Keats’s commentary on Romantic
opposites includes the real and ideal, history versus myth, finite versus infinite. The
theme of truth is also prevalent. The speech of Oceanus and the ascension of Apollo
both point to Hyperion’s concern with truth and its relationship with beauty, knowledge,
and suffering. Truth is closely associated with knowledge and both are acquired through
pain, which results from the understanding and acceptance of change and
impermanence. However painful, truth is pure and beautiful, and what is beautiful is
eternal. It is this honorable truth that the human spirit strives to attain. That is why Keats
calls Hyperion:
“the agonies, the strife of human hearts”
The poem is tragic with most of the qualities of a tragedy. Oceanus is working as a
chorus giving the poem’s moral and working as a mediator. Keats says: All I hope is
that I may not lose interest in human affairs. In his later poetry, the realm of Flora and
Old Pan are gone. His early poems were sensuous, but later he became aware of
human sufferings. He thought that poetry of escape is not the real poetry. Real poetry
deals with human beings. The function of poetry according to Keats is a friend to soothe
the cares of man and lift up his thought. In the poems, gods have been given human
qualities symbolizing sufferings of man. Gods are huge and Titanic, but have been
given human characteristics effectively and realistically. Saturn’s misery, Thea’s stature
all perfect human as exemplified in the line, ‘I have no comfort for thee, no, not one’.
Keats has humanized the gods to reveal human sufferings as frther in Saturn’s speech:
“Who had power
To make me desolate? Whence came the strength?”
He has seen certain omens which indicate that his downfall may be imminent. Human
beings feel apprehensive when they hear a dog howling or an owl screeching; and this
god is feeling apprehensive because the wings of eagles darkened his palace and
because the neighing of steeds has been heard which had never been heard before “by
gods or wondering men”. The omens are different no doubt, but Hyperion’s reaction to
the omens is the same as that of human beings is. And just as a human being might still
resolve to fight against a coming danger, so Hyperion too says that he will use his
terrible right arm. He feels most restless to think of the fate which might overtake him.
But his restlessness is human restlessness under the pressure of a coming danger. Just
as a wealthy man is afraid lest he should become bankrupt, so Hyperion is afraid lest he
should lose his ‘‘lucent empire”. Just as a wealthy man is afraid lest he should be
deprived of all his gains, so Hyperion is afraid lest he should lose “the blaze, the
splendour, and the symmetry”. Hyperion is at this time like a fish out of water. Ha would
like to begin the day sooner than usual, but the laws of Nature do not permit him to do
that. He picks up courage only when his father whispers to him from somewhere in
heaven and urges him to go and join his fellow-Titans on the earth; another human
activity.
Keats suffered from the two experiences of entirely different nature: imagination and
reality. It is evident, then, that Keats was grappling with the problem of human suffering
and with a human dilemma. He even suggests the simple formula: What cannot be
cured must be endured. Human beings should face the facts squarely and calmly, and
such a calm acceptance of realities shows not a defeatist mentality but a manly or even
a divine frame of mind. Having arrived at this stage in his thinking, Keats went on to
write the great odes in which his human concerns find a full utterance. Keats has like
Apollo, acquired the tragic vision and become a great poet. Had he lived longer, he
would have written even greater poetry and it would have been a poetry marked by
profound thought, intense emotion, and a portrayal of the stern realities of human life.