Skip to main content

Grandeur of the dooms

John Keats by William Hilton [Wikipedia]


One of the poems included in CBSE’s class 12 English literature is an extract from Keats’ Endymion. A question that has come to me again and again from students as well as teachers is: What does “the grandeur of the dooms…” mean? It is a line that has perplexed me too. I have been amused by the kind of interpretations given in the guidebooks for students. Quite many of these books interpret the word ‘dooms’ to mean the Doomsday. Look at the following answer given in one such guidebook made available online by a well-known educational establishment. 

That is very amusing considering the fact that Keats was an agnostic, if not a confirmed atheist. Keats would never accept a God who would come riding a majestic cloud on the day of the Last Judgment to apportion the good and the evil souls to Heaven and Hell. Evil is an integral part of life, Keats knew too well. No human can avoid evil any more than “a rose can avoid a blighting wind.” How do you believe in a benevolent Supreme Being who cares for his creation in a world where evil is predominant?

If Keats cared to establish a religion, its deity would have been Beauty. Didn’t he tell us that “Beauty is truth, truth beauty”? He even went to the extent of saying that we don’t need to know anything more than that. For Keats, beauty is divine. Beauty is the ultimate answer to all the mysteries and riddles of life.

The extract given in class 12 by CBSE is a paean to beauty. “A thing of beauty is a joy forever,” it begins. The first few lines describe the blessings of beauty. Beauty is a special place (bower) prepared for us by nature. It brings us peace and relaxation, good sleep and sweet dreams, good health and blissful happiness. Beauty brings us endless joy. Nothing else can do that. Not religion, not gods, let alone other ephemeral things.

In order to enjoy the blessings of beauty, we bind ourselves to the earth with a band of flowers which we “wreath” every day. There is much sadness on earth, however. All that sadness is a creation of human beings. Despondence, lack of noble people, gloom, evils that we perpetrate… We create all that sadness. And that sadness puts us on a quest for happiness!

Then the poet goes on to give us a list of things that bring happiness. All those things belong to nature. Sun, moon, daffodils, streams, trees… And finally some human-made beauty too: literature – “All lovely tales that we have heard or read”. It is here that “the grandeur of the dooms” appears.

Look at the lines:

And such too is the grandeur of the dooms

We have imagined for the mighty dead…

The ‘mighty dead’ are our past heroes about whom we weave beautiful stories in our poems and epics and other works of literature. These works of literature, along with the numerous beautiful things in nature, become “An endless fountain of immortal drink,” the fountain of joy for the questing human soul. This beauty is immortal, divine - coming from "heaven's brink". It will go on without end, without death. Nature will keep giving us beauty and generations of humans will keep writing good literature.

So what does the phrase ‘grandeur of the dooms’ mean? It means the glory of the deaths that we have imagined for our bygone heroes. That is, ‘doom’ translates as ‘death’. Our literatures have imagined the glory in the deaths of those heroes and made those deaths beautiful.

Death cannot be glorious or beautiful. But art has the power to render them majestic. “Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar.” How beautiful that death is! Who but Shakespeare could have made it so beautiful? Look at Othello’s final moments with Desdemona: “Put out the light, then put out the light.” The final cry of Conrad’s Kurtz – “The horror! The horror!” – has the same sublime touch though that character was not exactly heroic.

Keats died at the beautiful age of 25. Too early for any human being to die. He had achieved remarkable success in that very short lifespan. Not as a surgeon that he had educated himself to be but as the High Priest of Beauty. Though ‘success’ came to him posthumously. In his lifetime very few people appreciated his poems. Better known poets like Byron ridiculed Keats’ poetry as onanism, intellectual masturbation.

Keats died a sad death. Can death be anything but sad? But in Keats’ case, it was the tragic premature death of a questing genius who had so much to contribute to literature. Some Shakespeare may yet be born to convert that tragedy into the “grandeur of a doom…”

Keats' tombstone
"Here lies one whose name was writ in water."

x

 

Comments

  1. Hari OM
    Keats, I like to think, will be nodding approvingly of this take on his words, from whichever part of his 'doom' permits it! YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is such an informative post! You’ve clearly put a lot of effort into researching this, and it shows. I’m bookmarking this for future reference!

    Please visit my sit also:
    top 10 schools in Chennai

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

The Real Enemies of India

People in general are inclined to pass the blame on to others whatever the fault.  For example, we Indians love to blame the British for their alleged ‘divide-and-rule’ policy.  Did the British really divide India into Hindus and Muslims or did the Indians do it themselves?  Was there any unified entity called India in the first place before the British unified it? Having raised those questions, I’m going to commit a further sacrilege of quoting a British journalist-cum-historian.  In his magnum opus, India: a History , John Keay says that the “stock accusations of a wider Machiavellian intent to ‘divide and rule’ and to ‘stir up Hindu-Muslim animosity’” levelled against the British Raj made little sense when the freedom struggle was going on in India because there really was no unified India until the British unified it politically.  Communal divisions existed in India despite the political unification.  In fact, they existed even before the Briti...

The Ugly Duckling

Source: Acting Company A. A. Milne’s one-act play, The Ugly Duckling , acquired a classical status because of the hearty humour used to present a profound theme. The King and the Queen are worried because their daughter Camilla is too ugly to get a suitor. In spite of all the devious strategies employed by the King and his Chancellor, the princess remained unmarried. Camilla was blessed with a unique beauty by her two godmothers but no one could see any beauty in her physical appearance. She has an exquisitely beautiful character. What use is character? The King asks. The play is an answer to that question. Character plays the most crucial role in our moral science books and traditional rhetoric, religious scriptures and homilies. When it comes to practical life, we look for other things such as wealth, social rank, physical looks, and so on. As the King says in this play, “If a girl is beautiful, it is easy to assume that she has, tucked away inside her, an equally beauti...

Helpless Gods

Illustration by Gemini Six decades ago, Kerala’s beloved poet Vayalar Ramavarma sang about gods that don’t open their eyes, don’t know joy or sorrow, but are mere clay idols. The movie that carried the song was a hit in Kerala in the late 1960s. I was only seven when the movie was released. The impact of the song, like many others composed by the same poet, sank into me a little later as I grew up. Our gods are quite useless; they are little more than narcissists who demand fresh and fragrant flowers only to fling them when they wither. Six decades after Kerala’s poet questioned the potency of gods, the Chief Justice of India had a shoe flung at him by a lawyer for the same thing: questioning the worth of gods. The lawyer was demanding the replacement of a damaged idol of god Vishnu and the Chief Justice wondered why gods couldn’t take care of themselves since they are omnipotent. The lawyer flung his shoe at the Chief Justice to prove his devotion to a god. From Vayalar of 196...

Our gods must have died laughing

A friend forwarded a video clip this morning. It is an extract from a speech that celebrated Malayalam movie actor Sreenivasan delivered years ago. In the year 1984, Sreenivasan decided to marry the woman he was in love with. But his career in movies had just started and so he hadn’t made much money. Knowing his financial condition, another actor, Innocent, gave him Rs 400. Innocent wasn’t doing well either in the profession. “Alice’s bangle,” Innocent said. He had pawned or sold his wife’s bangle to get that amount for his friend. Then Sreenivasan went to Mammootty, who eventually became Malayalam’s superstar, to request for help. Mammootty gave him Rs 2000. Citing the goodness of the two men, Sreenivasan said that the wedding necklace ( mangalsutra ) he put ceremoniously around the neck of his Hindu wife was funded by a Christian (Innocent) and a Muslim (Mammootty). “What does religion matter?” Sreenivasan asks in the video. “You either refuse to believe in any or believe in a...