The Presentation of Nature in the poem: “On the Grasshopper and the Cricket”
The presentation of nature exists in many poems and represents by many different ways from things as great as the beach in the poem “Dover Beach” by Matthew Arnold to things as simply and tiny as a flower in “The Flower-Fed Buffaloes” by Vachel Lindsay. Keats is not an exception in the this trend as nature is described with the consistence of many messages by using the image of the grasshopper and the cricket with the landscape surrounds them.
The first impression that the readers may get from the messages Keats sends into his poem is the feeling of pleasant, sensual and enjoyable side of nature. This showed mainly in the octave stanza of the poem, first of all, by the phrase “summer luxury”. This sibilance technique creates the “s” sound, which makes a feeling of long, but also relaxing of the nature in the summer. Also, the word “luxury” itself suggests the satisfaction of feeling, of anything which pleased the senses. Furthermore, it helps supporting Keats’ idea about nature as it is lively and cheerful. Moreover, the poet shows his delicately in word choice by using words such as “rests”, “ease” and “pleasant” to develop more to his idea, makes the readers get his full message more clearly and precisely. This encourages the readers to think that nature offers all creature needs, provides them with its calm and kind. Nature likes a mother that it makes the grasshopper to enjoy its feeling in the simplest way, without fear or disruption. This is another way of thinking for this message.
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Then, Keats uses the impression above to develop another idea for nature as it respects everything on Earth, even the smallest creatures like the grasshopper in this case. As we all know, grasshopper is a small, fragile and active creature, therefore, its sound is also small and easy to fade into many “visible” and loud sounds. However, in his poem, Keats shows the readers that nature can also leave a space for the smallest creature like the grasshopper to speak up his mind. That’s why the readers will notice the fading and unexisting sound of the birds as they “are fainted with the hot sun.” This personification technique creates a sense that the birds are tired and weak so their voices can’t be noticed. And what the grasshopper sings can be heard in wide range: “from hedge to hedge”. This repetition technique emphasizes on the long distance the voice has traveled and echoed through the landscape.
Another side of nature is presented as an opposition for two of the ideas above, clearly showed in the sestet of the poem that nature is harsh, cruel and powerful. In this time, the nature lets the cricket’s voice to be ‘visible’ by “wrought a silence” to the atmosphere. The phrase suggests the cold, mysterious feeling as nature can stop and froze everything on the landscape, force them to silence. The personification used in the word ‘wrought’ suggests the action of shaped things into the right order especially metals and iron, and also highlights many adjectives for the readers as nature is violence and powerful. This is also supported by the sibilance in “seems to one in drowsiness half lost.” The ‘s’ sound now creates a sense of evil, mysterious and undefeatable of nature. This shows that nothing can stop nature to do what it wants. Nature has “froze” everything, this idea emphasizes on the existence of the cricket voice. This creates the similarity like what the nature does to the grasshopper. This quite atmosphere and the fragile sound remind the readers of the feeling that they’re back to the summer with the grasshopper’s voice. Nature lights up the landscape of the boring, cold, desperate winter into the lively, bright and warm of the summer. The sentence: “The grasshopper’s among some grassy hills” supports this idea.
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By reading the poem, the readers can get the sense of the eternity of nature through the first sentence of each stanza. Both of these sentence shares a similarity in the phrase: “the poetry of earth”. This repetition technique emphasizes on the mortal and eternity of nature by comparing it with poetry using metaphor technique. “Poetry” is the consistent of beauty throughout of time and it exists with human feelings. This could be understood that nature and beauty exists with human feelings. The message is repeated again within two phrases: “never dead” and “ceasing never” of each stanza. Let us consider on the first sentence of the sestet, we notice that the words are not in order as “never” can’t stand at the end. This can be explained that Keats uses this significant detail to emphasize on the everlasting of nature and later on to rhyme with the word “ever” – which locates near the end of the poem. When we combine these words together: “never dead”, “never” and “ever”, the readers will get the sense that by every tiny details in the poem with many ways of thinking, they still all reach to one of the most key points of Keats: Nature is the Beginning and the End of the world, exist throughout of time.
An overall message that is sent through the poem which lies underneath of the two seasons: summer and winter highlights in the poem, simply indicates that nature is perfect in its way by Keats. The most remarkable technique is oxymoron for the “pleasant weed”. Weed, as we know, is a small plant that has no implication of not being wanted and is being out of control. However, the nature can rule over the abandon, unwanted, wasted weed and makes it become “pleasant”. Also, considering the form and structure of the poem, we can see that the poet uses the “perfect form of expression” and applies sonnet into to form of the poem – which is used for love poem to describe nature. This suggests that, for him, nature has the perfect beauty that nothing can compare to it. Another way to think about this is nature makes people passionate with its perfection that the poet has to use “the perfect form of expression” to describe.
Like many poems which have the same themes of description of nature, Keats shows in his poem that nature is beautiful and perfect in its way. Also, he highlights his own feeling of respectful and admirable for nature as it is great, huge, intangible and we, human still have to find out more about it.
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