Keats' "La Belle Dame sans Merci" Analysis
Keats' "La Belle Dame sans Merci" Analysis
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LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI
John Keats
Brief Summary
Synopsis
Stanza 2: The voice continues to ask what pains the knight and why he looks so unwell.
The speaker suggests winter is coming, the harvest is over and the animals are preparing
for the cold months.
Stanza 3: The speaker describes the knight’s pale complexion, emphasising that he looks
unwell.
Stanza 4: The knight takes over and starts telling his tale. He says he met a lady who
was an absolute picture of beauty. He describes her as a “faery’s child”, implying her
beauty was other-worldly.
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Stanza 5: The knight bestowed upon the lady hand-made gifts of garlands and bracelets.
He thought that he could see love in her eyes when he gave them to her. There is a
suggestion of some sexual act in “and made sweet moan”.
Stanza 6: He let her ride on his horse and was bewitched by not only her beauty but also
her voice which was like a song.
Stanza 7: He describes that she fed him roots and other plants found in the surroundings
and told him in a strange or unfamiliar language that she loved him.
Stanza 8: She took him to a cave where she cried and they embraced. He kissed her
whilst she closed her eyes.
Stanza 9: She encouraged him to sleep and he had a dream which he notes was the last
time he slept before being found by the first speaker.
Stanza 10: In his dream he saw pale kings and princes all crying out that the beautiful,
merciless woman has him in her grasp. This can be interpreted as a warning for the
knight; the woman has enchanted many others before him and made them sick with
love.
Stanza 11: The horrible faces and cries of the men in his dream wake him and he finds
himself alone in the limbo space between the cold hill side and the lake.
Stanza 12: He explains finally that these are the reasons why the first speaker has found
him here by the lake, perhaps waiting for the woman to return or sombrely lamenting his
loss. He suggests his tale and his ordeal is also the reason why the plants ``wither'd” and
“no birds sing”. Possibly his perception of the world, after being tricked and abandoned
in love is limited to this pessimistic, melancholic view.
Context
Historical Context:
- 4 years before the poem was written, Napoleon’s army had fallen at the Battle of
Waterloo and England was revering in the money gained from supporting the
dictator’s opposition.
- King George III was mentally ill and unable to rule so his son, Prince George of
Wales ruled England as a proxy. This situation influenced writing such as Percy
Shelly’s sonnet “England in 1819” which ridiculed the King.
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- Industrialisation in British cities created a working class that constantly agitated for
better working conditions and political rights.
- Queen Victoria was born in 1819 and the society that flourished under her rule
would elevate Keats’ writing to the place it now holds in the English canon.
Literary Context:
- Keats wrote “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” in the early Spring of 1819. This was just
a few weeks before he wrote some of his most powerful odes and close to his
death in 1821.
- The poel was published in May 1820 in the journal Indicator. This year, a year
before his death, was his most productive. Some examples of the odes he wrote
are “To Autumn”, “Ode to a Nightingale” and “Ode to a Grecian Urn” which are now
some of the most famous poems in the English language.
- The poem is infused with Keats’ personal life and conflicts, seen in the
predicament of the dying medieval knight, the predominant character of the ballad.
- It is suggested that this poem also seals Keats’ pact with literary immortality.
From his letters at the time, there is a sudden merging between his thinking about
poetry and poetic theory and the gestation of his works.
- Keats also took much inspiration from his contemporaries, their practice and
theories, such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth. The
aforementioned poets wrote a collaborative book, Lyrical Ballads, which significantly
influenced the English Romantic movement.
- Coleridge’s notions of “willing suspension of disbelief” fostered Keats’ concept of
“negative capability” which is an important working principle in “La Belle Dame Sans
Merci”. The theory refers to the poet’s ability to follow inspiration without letting
prejudice interfere. The two characters, the knight and the beautiful woman, are
“shadows of imagination” (Coleridge) and ask the reader to engage in poetic faith,
which Keats spoke of in letters to his brothers George and Thomas Keats.
- Keats believed that the poet had to allow the imagination to overcome the critical
demeanor of the traditional poet. This is seen in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” by
transferring human emotions onto supernatural characters, making them seem
true and plausible.
- “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” was written in April 1819 and draws inspiration from
Alain Chartrier’s poem which tells a similar story.
- The flower imagery Keats uses is common in English literature before the
Romantic period (around 1798-1837). The period was one of great change and
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many writers found inspiration in the French Revolution and the economic and
political atmosphere of the time.
The Title
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La Belle Dame sans Merci
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the moment something is insisted, it sustenance to live and without her
becomes suspicious. he would die.
Indication that something is amiss; In her territory, she takes control
she speaks a foreign language that
She took me to her Elfin grot, and the knight is now prey. The
And there she wept and sighed full sore, power changes hands.
he understands.
He is under the impression that he
Adds to uncanny nature. And there I shut her wild wild eyes is in control. Shutting eyes =
Signifies danger. With kisses four. indicative of death, implies one or
The knight thinks he can solve her more of the characters will die.
problems with kisses. Male
ignorance, in reality he’s at her
mercy. And there she lullèd me asleep, Knight is now the object of the
sentence and lady becomes
And there I dreamed—Ah! woe betide!— dominant.
Repetition of dream highlights the
The latest dream I ever dreamt
strange and unreal quality of the
time spent with the woman. Latest On the cold hill side.
could mean the most recent or the But this is not where he falls
last dream; the knight is dying. asleep? The contrast shows the
detachment between a life in love
I saw pale kings and princes too, and a life in reality.
Paleness links them to the knight’s
complexion. The strength and status Pale warriors, death-pale were they all;
Repetition reinforces the point that
of these people has been drained. They cried—‘La Belle Dame sans Merci anyone is susceptible to the
Their warnings alert the knight for Thee hath in thrall!’ woman’s prowess.
the first time that he is in danger.
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Themes
- In the poem the knight’s love transforms into an obsession as although the
beautiful woman is likely an illusion, he is unable to get her out of his mind. The
poem expresses, therefore, warning about the dangers of intense romantic love.
- The knight’s complexion suggests intense love and loss drains a man of his
emotional energy. When the object of love disappears, the lover left behind
undergoes a spiritual death and is unable to see beauty in the world anymore, only
in what he has lost. The poem’s warnings suggest that love, though wonderful in
the moment, is dangerous and when obsessive leads to distraught.
- The knight describes the woman as a “faery’s child” (line 14), suggesting her
ability to charm him is a supernatural force.
- The line between enchantment and obsession is thin; the lady becomes the
knight’s sole focus and besides the lady he sees “nothing else...all day” (line 22)
- The reference to Manna in stanza 7 suggests that the lady is responsible for the
knight’s survival, she is the very substance which he feeds off. This can be
seen as obsession; without the “belle dame”, the knight cannot live.
- In the dream sequence, the knight sees a glimpse of what is in his future; the “pale
kings and princes”, “death pale” (lines 37-38). They are enslaved to the
memories of their time with the “belle dame” and sucked dry of joy and life.
- Strangely, the lady’s merciless behaviour consists of the love and joy she provides.
It is her disappearance that causes pain. The poem suggests that anything one
falls in love with can cause joy and pain. Anything can end in an instant. The
poem warns that the joys and beauty of an intense love, like that experienced by
the knight, is ultimately not worth the pain and suffering it can cause should such
love come to a (potentially inevitable) end.
- The poem is set in the Medieval period. In the first stanza, the reader is
introduced to the archaic “thee” (line 1) which immediately hints at the time setting.
- The following address, “knight-at-arms” confirms this. The precise placement of
“knight-at-arms” in the line reflects some of the poem's main themes.
- This is the knight’s formal title. It represents honorable and chivalric codes of
conduct that knights in Medieval times swore by.
- The hyphens accentuate the monosyllabic words and “knight-at-arms” is
isolated by a caesura on one side and an end stop on the other.
- This highlights the tension between the expected image of what a
Medieval knight should be, valiant and strong, and the state in which this
particular wallowing knight is found.
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- It also alienates the knight visually and grammatically from his context.
- Keats uses the Medieval setting and fairy-tale style of the ballad to create a tone
which matches the beautiful, other-worldly nature of love but also has the
capacity to expose love’s harshness. The noble knight is overcome and his
beautiful fairy-woman disappears.
- In Medieval times, the lack of scientific knowledge meant there was a greater belief
in mythical and other-worldly creatures such as the fairy woman in the poem. It was
believed that beautiful children were gifts from fairies.
- The tragic ballad is based on a 15th century poem by Alain Chartier; Keats
seems to be saying that love does not change with the times, it is absorbing and
destructive no matter what time or by whom it is experienced.
- In his Medieval revival, Keats brings romanticism to its culmination; the typical
Medieval atmosphere of enchantment and marvel allows him to explore his theory
of “negative capability”.
- The beautiful fairy lady who bewitched the knight is reminiscent of the Medieval
vampire who sucked men’s blood cold. Her “elfin grot” (line 29) and the dream
visions of “pale kings and princes” (line 37) diffuse the poem with a mood of awe
and wonder associated with the Medieval mind. Nothing is certain and definite,
instead, Keats allows the reader to use their imagination. We wonder about the
nature of the “faery child” and the fate of the poor knight. This is what Keats
wanted; to challenge the reader’s perception and to make them recognise the
transformative nature of poetry. It is possible to consider Keats’ composition of the
poem as an act of love itself.
- The illusion of the beautiful woman means that the knight is unable to see through
her disguise and recognise her merciless nature. He falls for the disguise and pays
the price for doing so; her love is death.
- The narration is interesting as a mode of deception. Keats asks the reader to
occupy a liminal space, to suspend their ideas about reality and instead believe
in the fictional world drawn up in the literature. The poem is therefore deceptive on
several levels; firstly, the reader is deceived by the words of the author by
accepting them as true. Secondly, the knight is deceived by the beautiful lady
whom he falls in love with. We then ask whether the knight is not in fact deceived
by his own imagination, is it possible the woman never existed? Could the knight
be merging the real world with his imagination? The speaker at the start is also set
up to be deceived by the knight’s tale. It is within all this deception that we can
deduce Keats’ exploration of the complexities of love and expression.
- Keats seems to say that love is a true and powerful emotion but it is also deceptive.
What the knight experiences may not actually be love. He thinks it is because he
feels the emotion so intensely. Keats warns his readers that not every intense
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visceral emotion or attraction can be labelled as love. The knight is tricked by
the persuasions of a “belle dame” but he also fools himself for believing love could
come so easily.
- The verisimilitude of the knight’s experience with the woman may also tempt the
reader to believe his experience was real and not imagined. The truth is that we will
never know and Keats maintains an element of ambiguity akin to the knight’s
bewilderment, giving the reader a little taste of angst and desperation for an answer
to his problems.
- “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” explores the boundaries of what is real and what is
imagined. The knight’s story contrasts the barren and dark landscape in which he
found to such an extent that it could be assumed that the world he talks of is a
fairy-tale. His sickness, however, emphasises that the two worlds are bound
together, that imagination can be so powerful as to shape reality.
- The descriptions of the settings create a strong contrast between the two worlds.
The first stanza uses harsh imagery to describe a cold, barren and inhospitable
landscape. The knight’s story, however, blends the line between fantasy and reality.
It capitalises on the fanciful aspects of his experience but is also ambiguous in its
details. The woman speaks “in language strange” (line 27) and takes the knight
to her “elfin grot” (line 29). It is not entirely clear whether these terms are meant
literally. His insistence in the world being true, for example in confessing “sure”
(line 27) she spoke a strange language, creates a suspicion that his tale may not be
the literal truth. The knight describes what he saw and how he was affected, this is
the reason why he has been found loitering by a cold lake.
- The dream section in stanzas 9 to 11 are significant when considering the
importance of imagination versus reality in the poem. They are a fantasy within
his fantasy; he wishes that he had foreseen the pain such love would cause him but
really, he learns the truth about what his future holds.
- By the end of the poem, the knight’s reality becomes a confused merging of the
two worlds; the lakeside and the memory of his experience. It is possible to
interpret the knight as having been dreaming all along, but given the intense detail
of the imaginary world, it seems real and this means that waking doesn’t imply an
escape from torturous love.
- The final stanza is a repeat of the first but the knight speaks instead of the unnamed
speaker. The poem ends with a final depiction of a lifeless man lingering on the
memory of an experience that may never have happened. Ultimately, the presence
of the beautiful woman is irrelevant as the knight is trapped in the place where
imagination merges with reality and he is unable to escape back into either world
after his experience.
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Romanticism:
Structure
Form:
Metre:
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“O what can ail thee, knight - at - arms,” (line 1)
- The reader gets a strong sense of rhythm from lines like this whereas, at other
points, the meter is reliant on how it is read aloud; loitering, depending on the
reader’s pronunciation, can be two syllables or it can be three.
- “Loitering”, as a 2 syllable word is a trochee (a word with a stresses-unstressed
syllable combination).
- Even if the reader pronounces “loitering” with 3 syllables the last two syllables are
read as unstressed or not heavily stressed.
- This means that either reading gives the desired effect, to
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Occasionally stresses are rearranged for emphasis:
- The characteristically smooth metre is skewed to reflect the knight’s turmoil and
horrors of recollection.
- The stresses bring to the reader’s attention the most important, symbolic and
meaningful elements of the lines. Not just deathly pale princes but princesses too,
both men and women of noble stature, those high up individuals that seem
untouchable. The tone created is one of disbelief, grievance and trauma.
- This results in a quickened and almost rushed end which gives the poem its pace
and they also act as reminders of the knight’s impending doom.
Rhyme Scheme:
- The poem follows the traditional rhyme scheme of an English ballad, where the
even lines rhyme.
- Each quatrain follows: ABCB.
- The reason for this rhyme scheme is because ballads were initially accompanied by
a song and dance. Clear rhyme would have enhanced the lyrical nature of such a
poem.
- Keats’ therefore honours the traditional English ballad in La Belle Dame Sans
Merci, making reference to the origin of the form and grounding the poem in
tradition which reinforces the myth-like tale and “willing suspension of disbelief”.
Internal rhyme:
- There are cases of internal rhyme which add to the lyricism and flow of the text as
well as drawing attention to certain themes.
- “Ail thee” (line 1) and “paley” (line 2)
- The sounds of the words are drawn out like cries which keeps the rhyme going
and also gives an indication of the knight’s emotional state.
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Language
Speaker:
Setting:
- The middle ages (a period in Europe between 5th and 15th centuries) in the
countryside.
- It is possible to specify the time period because of the way the knight kindly and
nobly treats the beautiful lady. The chivalric code was introduced in the 11th
century, so we may presume the poem is set after this introduction.
- The country may be Keats’ England or Alain Chartier’s France. This is a possibility
because Keats based his poem on Alan Chartier’s with the same name.
- Because the plant’s are “withered” (line 3) and “the harvest’s done” (line 8), it
must be late Autumn, nearly winter which creates a coolness to the atmosphere
when the specific place is mentioned as between a lake a “cold hill side” (line 36).
- The knight wakes from his dream here and he describes how he rode with the lady
and embraced her in a cave in the same area. We can consider the dream space
part of the setting, a place populated by “pale kings and princes” (line 37) which
reflects the real setting of the cold hill and lakeside.
- The enigmatic setting is designed to make the reader question where the border
between reality and dream lies. Is it possible that the knight’s tale is entirely a
dream? This follows Keats’ personal investigation with the poetic suspension of
reality and “negative capability”
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Symbols:
1. Flowers
- Flower imagery is used throughout the poem, mostly with some form of symbolic
weight.
- We usually associate flowers with Spring, love and life but this is not always the
case in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”.
2. Seasons
- The beginning and end of the poem suggest the season in Autumn or Winter. The
middle section, however, when the knight describes his time with the woman,
seems to be set in the summertime. This suggests that her beauty changes the
knight’s perception of the world.
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Line 4: “and no birds sing”
- This creates a quietness associated with winter and the cooler months. The
acknowledgement of their absence increases the intensity of the desolate setting
where the knight is found.
3. Paleness
- The opening of the poem; “O what can ail thee, knight-at-arms,/ Alone and
palely loitering?” immediately brings to the forefront of the imagination, images of
paleness and colourlessness.
Line 37-38: “I saw pale kings and princes too, / Pale warriors, death-pale were they
all”
- The knight uses the word “pale” repeatedly in these 2 lines whilst describing his
dream in the fairy lady’s cave. He associates their paleness with death, confirming
the previous associations.
- The repetition in the stanza emphasises the similarity between “pale” and “all”,
“belle”, “thrall”. This consonance links the words together and makes the reader
wonder how the “belle dame” is responsible for the “paleness” of all the kings
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and princes in the knight’s dream. As readers, we begin to develop an awareness
of the ambivalent woman who seems to bring sorrow and deathly paleness to all
those she has “in thrall”. The knight’s dream seems like a warning that he is
unable to heed, blinded by his admiration for the beautiful woman.
- The poem appears like a dream sequence or a fantastical tale. The knight’s
explicit dream sequence, however, encourages questions of consciousness and the
nature of reality. We are led to ask where the boundaries lie between the two states
and as readers are asked to recognise our willingness to suspend reality in order to
allow ourselves to be absorbed into fictional worlds such as the one erected in “La
Belle Dame Sans Merci”.
Line 34-35: “And there I dreamed—Ah! woe betide!— / The latest dream I ever
dreamt”
- The repetition of “dream” shows the knight’s insistence on the vision he had, he
wants the listener to believe it was imaginary and dreamt up. He insists on a
distinction between what is real and what is imagined. The repetition, however,
makes us question whether he insists too much. Has the knight been confused and
blurred the line between imagination and reality?
- Medieval romances often associate women with water and Keats uses this
tradition to great effect. The result is that the man who falls for such a woman is left
weak and drained.
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- The water in the poem is also stagnant, in a lake. If we are to associate the lake
and the water with the beautiful woman, then her presence pauses the knight’s
progress. Her stagnancy leaves him to stop in the natural flow of life and lie
dormant, to fester like a still lake which grows algae and putrefies.
Assonance:
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Repetition:
- Reiterates the wildness of her eyes but also indicates and introduces an element of
danger. This is the first time the beautiful woman is described as anything other
than beautiful.
- “Wild” insinuates a primitive or uncultivated state; she’s other worldly, found in the
natural environment and untamed by the society the noble knight comes from.
- She is uncontrollable, however much the knight attempts to dominate her by giving
her gifts and “set[ting] her on my pacing steed”, she is untamable and will get
her way.
Refrain:
- The stanzas that are repeated at some distance in the poem such as the first and
last.
- This gives the poem a cyclical feel. The knight finds himself back where the first
speaker discovered him- in the cold and barren landscape beside the lake.
- The coldness of the hillside indicates the knight’s emotional state, reflected in his
surroundings. A form of pathetic fallacy.
- We are reminded that although the knight may momentarily be able to escape back
to the world of happiness and joy he experienced with the “belle dame”, he must
always return to cold reality. His memories are merely that, fantasies of the past.
Critical Views
Feminist Reading:
- It has been argued that “La Belle Dame sans Merci” is anti-feminist by taking the
female figure as a seductive femme fatale who deceitfully draws a man away
from his masculinity (represented by the Knight’s valiant social position) and then
leaves him in ruin.
- There is discussion over how the “faery child” (line 14) is represented within the
poem and how the power dynamics act out throughout the poem. It is important to
focus on power relations between the man and woman considering the social
context of the 19th century - context in which men and women were by and large
confined to different spheres.
- A feminist reading may allow us to better read the allegorical insinuations and
question whether the allegory holds truth.
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- Feminist critics argue that the woman is misrepresented throughout the poem,
including in its 12 quatrain form. The form Keats used was revived by Romantic
poets, and in the case of “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”, creates a haunting effect
which seems to foreshadow the destruction the female figure is about to inflict upon
the knight. This and the supernatural motif are used, according to feminist critics,
as a way of warning readers of the deadly powers of women.
- Focus on the woman’s eyes in “wild wild eyes” (line 31) acts as another form of
warning to men of the dangers of the female ability to hypnotise, overpower and
emasculate men through methods of seduction.
- If we consider the context of the 19th century, when Keats wrote the poem, a male
audience would never have deemed the feminine power as a positive motif. This is
because the ideal female at the time was dependent, submissive and pure.
Keat’s woman is none of these things. This suggests that in writing the poem,
Keats intended to conform to the social ideals of the time; that a submissive woman
was more desirable than a free and independent woman, because when a woman
was free and independent, she was dangerous to man.
- Keats goes as far as to imply the woman is something “other”. Through her use of
“language strange” (line 27), he suggests that she operates and communicates in
different ways to men, that she is essentially different in character. Feminist
critics object to this as they believe that gender differences are socially constructed.
- Feminist critics may also question how far we can trust the speaker of the poem. It
may be argued that it is not the obligation of the woman to love a man; the knight’s
perspective is subjective.
Theresa M. Kelley: “Poetics and the Politics of Reception: Keat’s “La Belle Dame Sans
Merci””
“Because the poem that bears her name is evidently riddled with signs of its
indebtedness to earlier poems, it presents a strong, perhaps deliberately exaggerated,
case for the poetic value of figures that acknowledge their history”
- Kelly suggests that Keat’s use of another poem’s title connects it to a rich history of
texts.
- It is implied that the historical consciousness of Romantic poets is important as they
use tropes and allegorical messages that relate to the past and can be better
understood when considered within the specific literary context.
- The poem is therefore, possibly an ode to poetry itself; Keat’s “Belle Dame”
suggests that poetic construction may be entwined with exigencies of publication
and critical reception as well as personal circumstance.
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Jane Rabb Cohen: “Keats-Shelly Journal Vol 17 1986”
“The knight at arms also defies convention, but he prompts laughter and pity if viewed
as a self-caricature of his creator”
- Cohen suggests that reading the poem contextually, and reading Keats’ personal
life into the poem makes for humorous reading.
- Instead of acting as a knight should, he defies the social expectations of his class
and appears a fool.
- If read in this way, the knight’s pain can be interpreted as hyperbolic,
accentuated and over-the-top. Keats mocks the social construct of donning
power to men who are actually weak and no better than the civilians they are meant
to protect.
Comparisons
Another noticeable difference is the Knight’s solitude is clear: “And this is why I
sojourn here,/ Alone and palely loitering” (lines 45-46). His loneliness after his loss is
also reflected by the sparse, barren setting in which he is found, compared to the
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abundant nature descriptions of when he is with the elfish woman. By contrast, the
speaker in “At an Inn'' never seems to extract himself from the partnership he longs
for. He mentions the physical distance between the pair in the last stanza, leaving it to the
end to press the fact that they are separate. This may imply a deeper emotional
connection between the couple, that despite the physical distance between them they are
bound in mind. The knight’s loss seems so recent that he cannot fathom this kind of
progressed acceptance of the loss of a lover.
Another difference between “At an Inn” and “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” is the presence or
absence of references to sex. Perhaps unusually for a poem that follows in the courtly
love tradition - a tradition in which women were elevated and idealised, and in which all
references to sex were usually omitted - “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” uses several
euphemisms or double entendres that seem to be referring to the lady’s genitalia
“fragrant zone” (line 18) or the act of making love “made sweet moan” (lines 19-20), “I
set her on my pacing steed” (line 21). In contrast, there is no overt or subtextual
references to sex in “At an Inn”. However, this may be due to the different contexts in
which they were written; Hardy’s poem was written in the late Victorian era - a time that
was known for its strict sexual mores; perhaps he could not make reference to sex if he
wanted to avoid censorship or condenmation.
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fact has been left both physically and psychologically ravaged by its loss. This is partly
why he seems young and inexperienced in love; his description of falling in love with the
elfish woman is fast paced and sudden. We can liken it to the description in “At an Inn'' of
“love/ which quicks the world” (lines 10-11). However, the intensity of his experience is
unmatched by the longing of the speaker in “At an Inn''.
The poems both move through modes of proximity, ultimately ending in distanced
lovers. In “At an Inn'', the couple start close together physically; “left alone” (line 17),
“Love’s own pair” (line 18), “between us” (line 20) but by the end they are physically
distanced by the “severing sea and land” (line 37). The physical proximity of the couple
is paired with an emotional distancing, seen in “never the love light-shone” (line 19) and
“love lingered numb” (line 28). This is the opposite in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”
where the knight is firstly found “alone and palely loitering” (line 2). It is only when he
“met a lady in the meads'' (line 13) that his sense of aloneness is altered and the couple
engage in several acts which implies close proximity; “she looked at me as she did
love,/ and made sweet moan” (lines 19-20), “I set her on my pacing steed” (line 21),
“she took me” (line 29), “I shut her wild wild eyes” (line 31). It is noticeable that the
proximity of the two is intense, they do a lot of things quickly (almost something new in
each stanza) whereas in “At an Inn'', the speaker uses the poem to only talk about one
instance of proximity, that being spending time sitting with the woman at an inn. The effect
of this is that although the Knight and his elfish lady seem to do a lot, the experience
seems brief and rushed. We sense the opposite in “At an Inn''. For this reason, the
Knight’s sudden experience of distance; “I awoke and found me here,/ On the cold hill’s
side” (line 43-44) is more painful and raw, possibly fresher than the gradual distance
established by the speaker and his lover in Hardy’s poem.
“La Belle Dame Sans Merci” and “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynare”
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the man the power, indicating a temporary shift in the power dynamics, as he is able to
pleasure the “faery” woman and assert his masculine identity. This is later subverted as
she “lull[s]” him “asleep” (line 33); the woman reclaims control and uses her powers to
send the exhausted knight to sleep. The sex in “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno
Cynare” is much more explicit and shocking for its time. This is particularly because of
the mention of the “bought red mouth” (line 9) which tells us that the speaker is paying
for the company of a woman. Her “red” mouth is symbolic of lust, desire and passion
but also offers a controversial viewpoint on love. The speaker enjoys the physicality of the
woman’s company, but this is where the love appears to end. Similarly, for the knight, the
love ends where the couple are together, one falling asleep. The idea of sleep and love is
interesting as a person is most vulnerable in sleep and to fall asleep with another person
implies a feeling of complete trust. This therefore, links to the theme of truth and
deception as in both partnerships, there is one person who is more willing to trust and to
fall in love than the other.
The love of the two men is similar in its obsessive nature. The knight cannot extricate
himself from the grip of the “faery’s child” (line 14) because the love he feels is so strong
that it is constantly compared to something otherworldly, something so intense it cannot be
mortal. The woman is a seductress, a sorcerer, a “faery” (line 14). The love
experienced by the speaker in “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynare” is different
in that is is interruptive, the speaker has moments of redress where he is able to forget
his former lover. For example, when he sleeps with the “bought red mouth” (line 9) the
tone and metre of the stanza implies a comfort found in the physical pleasures of the
sexual experience. However, this is then interrupted by the resurfacing of Cynara “when i
awoke and found the dawn was grey” (line 11).
Another similarity between the two is their obsession which is founded in their own
conjuring-up of the women they desire. We meet neither woman in the flesh in the
poems, they are both iterations of the man’s mind. In “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub
regno Cynare”, the speaker remembers Cynara and is haunted by “thy shadow” (line 2)
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and in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” the knight “awoke and found me here” (line 43)
which gives the impression all that came before the awakening was a dream. Is it
possible that the men conjure up the women they desire? The knight wants an all
encompassing, rich and intense love from a beautiful, pure - and therefore otherworldly -
woman, but perversely also wants to be slave to this love; he wants a love so intense that
he would do anything for it. The speaker in “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno
Cynare” wants a love which satisfies him both physically and mentally. The Cynara figure
is never given much substance, except for her pre-Raphaelite “pale lost lilies” (line 15)
complexion. Could this mean that he desires a submissive woman, a woman that doesn't
stop him from acting as he pleases yet remains faithful to him and hangs around like a
“shadow” (line 2)?
In “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynare”, the deception is plainly exposed in the
speaker’s reiterations of “i have been faithful to thee, Cynara! In my fashion” (line 6,
12, 18, 24). The poem is addressed to Cynara, the former lover of the speaker and that he
blatantly tells her in his work of his sexual endeavours with other women; “bought red
mouth” (line 9), demonstrates a different form of deception to that found in “La Belle
Dame Sans Merci”. Where in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci”, the deception is presented at
face-value, in the appearance and actions of the female, in “Non sum qualis eram bonae
sub regno Cynare”; the speaker exposes himself as the deceptive partner. That he
continues to try to persuade Cynara of his faithfulness exposes a level of self-deception;
he convinces himself of his faithfulness through the explanation “in my fashion” when
really it is clear he is unfaithful. In “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” the knight also engages
in self-deception as he remains in the clearing waiting for a woman that will never return
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to him; “I sojourn here,/ alone and palely loitering” (lines 45-46). Both men engage in
self-deception and this leads us to question the truthfulness of their female counterparts.
Is the woman in “La Belle Dame Sans Merci” real or a figment of the knight’s
imagination? How truthful is the speaker in “Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno
Cynare”? Was he really in love with Cynana or does he simply desire what he cannot
have? Is this the same case for the knight? The voices in the poems are questionable, we
are unsure, because of their narrow perspectives, how truthful they really are and it is
apparent that both men want what they cannot have. Possibly this skews their judgement
and the poems we read are utterly untrustworthy.
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