Saturday, January 25, 2020
Womanhood in The Eve of St. Agnes and La Belle Dame Sans Merci and Mari
Womanhood in The Eve of St. Agnes and La Belle Dame Sans Merci and Mariana by Keats      In the two poems "Mariana'' and "La Belle Dame Sans Merci'' and the  extract from ''The Eve of Saint Agnes'' the poets portray three  diverse perceptions of women. The reader distinguishes a woman as a  temptress, a woman whom is vulnerable and is dependent on man, and a  woman who is nubile and is innocently seductive.    "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" is a ballad, written in 1819. In this  ballad, the femme fatale deceives the Wretched Wright she meets. He  falls in love with the Belle Dame instantly and is convinced that she  too is in love with him; "She look'd at me as she did love". The  Tempter is "beautiful, a faery's child"; the Belle Dame looks  magnificent on the outer surface however beauty is only skin deep as  there is an inner wickedness about her. Her "eyes were wild" and she  enchants the Wretched Wright with "faery's song's". 'Faery's' were  thought to be from 'another place'. Her love was weird but wonderful  to the Wretched Wright,    "And sure in language true she said,    I love thee true."    The Belle Dame is conveyed, as a temptress who knowingly destroys  men's hearts, even from reading the title the reader knows this. The  title is translated to mean 'A Beautiful Lady Without Merci'; this  shows us that she is dangerous to men. "I saw pale kings, and princes  too", the Belle Dame had intentionally starved more men before the  Wretched Wright form love.    This contrasts with "The Eve of St. Agnes" where the reader observes  another type of temptress, Madeline, in the poem 'Mariana'. Madeline  is unknowingly seductive to the weak Porphyro. Porphyro even sings to  her,    "La belle dame sans merci:    Close to her ear" as ...              ...ness by Keats, "Alone and  palely loitering", we too connect this image with gloomy, suffering  love. As if he is colourless like the "Pale warriors, death-pale were  they all." Love had taken away all their cheerful colours along with  leaving them weak and defenceless.    In conclusion through these poems the reader explores the limitations  of society and the influence of these restrictions on women. The  reader also observes the power and beauty of love as well as the  result it has on people. In all three poems the last line of the poems  and the extract demonstrates this; "Oh God, that I were dead!" "For if  thy diest, my Love, I know not where to go", "And no birds sing." I  think that in all three endings Keats's and Tennyson some up the  distress caused by love and the penalty of its addiction very  admirably when looking into the poems not at first glance.                        
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