Angelos Sikelianos John Keats

3rd Junior High School of Kifisia

Angelos Sikelianos was born in Lefkada in 28 March 1884 and showed from an early age his love for learning and art. From his work which included poetry, tragedies, prose texts he was established as a accomplished poet and intellectual. His ravishing wealth of music and language show the strong bond he had with the nature.
His interest for greek mythology and secret warships holds a major role in his work . He was inspired by greek ideals and he understood the ancient greek culture as one primary source. That was the base for the Delphic idea which was his vision. He was committed to this idea since 1921 and for a long time.
Angelos Sikelianos promoted his “Delphic” idea not only in his poems, but also in his prose writing, articles, programmes, informative booklets and brochures. His wife, Eva Palmer-Sikelianossupportedhimthemostinhis whole career. Together they organized in 1927 and 1930 the renown “Delphic ceremony” and that was the first step for the creation of the “intellectual university” in Delphi which will go beyond the borders at the time and he would exalttheimmortal ,creativeandauthenticspirit of“humanitarianism”.
The first “Delphic ceremony” took place from 9 till 11 May in 1927. They included the performance of “Promitheas Desmotis”, which was created by Aischylos in the ancient theater of Delphi , directed by Eva Palmer-Sikelianos. Furthermore they organized a folk art exhibition in Kastri, athletic events and traditional dances under the direction of Angeliki Hatzimichali.
The emotion to audience that derives from the tragedy, is from their moral values and constitutes the ultimate force to understand the fact that they constitute an unbreakable entity. Generally the first Delphic ceremonies had an unexpected success mostly because of the innovative revival of the ancient drama. The direction came up with solutions to the problems which were combined with the choreography, the music, the costumes and the reliable archaeological site.
❖ "The Sibyl" (1940)
❖ "Christ in Rome" (1946)
❖ "The Death of Digenis" (1948)
❖ "Asclepius"
❖ “Yiannis Keats”
Abranch,thehandofApollo, Theplanetree’spolished,broadbough, Spreadaboveyou,mayitbringyou Theuniverse’simmortalpeace.
You’dmeetmeonthebroadandshiningshore
OfPylos,soI’dplanned, WithMentor’stallshippulleduponthebeach
Snuginthesand.
We would be bound, as those who sailed with thegods, Inthewingedfriendshipofyouth, And would take our seats in the stone thrones thatTime
Andcustomhadmadesmooth
Andmeetthatmanwhostillinthethirdgeneration Reignedserene,asage
Whose tales of travels and holy decrees had ripened
Inhismindwithage—
Atdawn,we’dattendthesacrificetothegods, Theritualslaughters
Of the three-year-old heifers, and hear the single cry
Thatrosefromhisthreedaughters
When the axe thwacked,and the black-fringed,slow-rollingeye
Drownedinaswoon
Ofdarkness,andthegilthornswererenderedidle, Ahazyhalfmoon.
The theme of this poem of 64 lines is an imaginary journey in the Peloponnese that Sikelianos was always dreaming to do together with his english friend and poet , John Keats . On 10.12.1946 , over thirty years after the composition of the poem
,Sikelianos with the help of Rex Warner presents a speech at the British Institute in Athens on the works of Keats.The relevant text was published in the journal “Anglo-Greek Review,” which continued to be directed by G. Katsimbalis until 1952.
John Keats, born in Moorgate, London, was an English Romantic lyric poet whose verse is known for its vivid imagery and great sensuous appeal. His reputation grew after his early death, and he was greatly admired in the Victorian Age. His influence can be seen in the poetry of Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and the Pre-Raphaelites, among others.
John Keats was apprenticed to a surgeon in 1811. He broke off the apprenticeship in 1814 and went to London, where he worked as a dresser, or junior house surgeon, at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ hospitals. His literary interests had crystallized by this time, and after 1817 he devoted himself entirely to poetry.
All his greatest poetry was written in a single year, 1819: “Lamia”
“The Eve of St. Agnes”
The great odes (“On Indolence,”
“On a Grecian Urn,” “To Psyche,”
“To a Nightingale,” “On Melancholy,” and “To Autumn”)
The two unfinished versions of an epic on Hyperion.
My spirit is too weak—mortality
Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep, And each imagined pinnacle and steep Of godlike hardship tells me I must die Like a sick eagle looking at the sky.
Yet ’tis a gentle luxury to weep That I have not the cloudy winds to keep Fresh for the opening of the morning’s eye. Such dim-conceived glories of the brain Bring round the heart an indescribable feud; So do these wonders a most dizzy pain, That mingles Grecian grandeur with the rude Wasting of old time—with a billowy main— A sun—a shadow of a magnitude.
The poem expresses the Keats’ reflections on art and mortality. The speaker, is saddened at the sight of Elgin Marbles, of the great Greek statues, housed in the British Museum. The enduring power and beauty of these ancient sculptures, they remind the viewer, that, he is relatively weak and doomed to die. Also the statues seem confused. It is only a “shadow” of “Greek greatness”, which is depicted.
Lines 1-4
In the poem’s opening lines, the speaker laments the fragility of his spirit in the face of impending death.
Hefeelslikeheisabouttofallasleep unintentionally because he is contemplating death. He struggles to maintainopeneyelids.Heimaginesthe world of the gods playing out in the statues in front of him, and their hardship speaks to his inevitable death.
Lines 5-8
The speaker uses a simile to compare himself to a “sick eagle” who,unabletofly,gazeslonginglyat the sky. The speaker notes that, unlike the eagle, at least he can be comforted as he can weep over his inability fly and see “the opening of themorningeye”orthesunrise
Lines 9-14
TheVolta,orturningpoint,ofthepoem occurs between the eighth and ninth lines. The speaker now continuous onto the discuss about his personal beliefs.Henotesthatheexperiencesa new heart conflict as a result of his ideas of soaring and suffering similar to the one experienced by God. In contrast, the statues make him experience their suffering and be in aweoftheirmagnificence.
The speaker makes sure the reader is aware of the sculptures’ “Wasting of ancienttime”bymentioningit.Theyare still stunning, however there is a noticeable crack in them. Even the most magnificent statue are demolished by time, so he, one mortal man,hasnohopeagainstit.
The last lines inform the reader that the statues make the speaker think about the billowing seas and the sun. Unfortunately, over everything, time rules.
SIKELIANOS
⇒RepresenterofHepatneseSchool
⇒ Keats'poetryrevealsalmostallthefeatures ofRomanticpoetry,suchas:
⇒ Hispoetryisexuberantand syntacticallycomplex
● subjectivity
● escapism
⇒hispoemsincludefeaturessuchas:
● additionofstrangenesstobeauty
● absoluteharmonyandunity
● completeabsenceofirony
● permanentexaggerationandlyrical reform
● sublimelyricism.
● loveofnature,melancholynoteand lyricism.
⇒ Heusesimagerypersonification,metaphors, andalliteration.
JOHN KEATSThemesinKeats'MajorPoems
● Transientsensationorpassion/enduring art.
● Dreamorvision/reality.
● Joy/melancholy.
● Theideal/thereal.
● Mortal/immortal.
● Life/death.
● Separation/connection.
● Beingimmersedinpassion/desiringto escapepassion.
● Nature
ThemesinSikelianos’MajorPoems
● Greekhistory
● Religioussymbolism
● Universalharmony
● Nature
● Ancientgreekmyths
● Women (hesawthemasa sanctuarysymboloffertility)
● Love
In the poems of both Sikelianos and Keats we detect nature as a source of their inspiration.
Sikelianos always used nature in his poems to express the love he had for it.He was mesmerized by the trees ,flowers and all the plants ,because it helped his escape for the reality.Thesmellofnaturewaslikeanantidoteforhis“wounds”.
Like William Wordsworth he had a cult of nature, though, unlike him, he did not see an immanent God in it. He simply saw another form of Beauty, which he could transform into poetrywithouttheaidofmemory;heonlyenricheditwithhisImagination.