“There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:/ We know her woof, her texture; she is
given/ In the dull catalogue of common things./ Philosophy will clip an Angel’s
wings,/ Conquer all mysteries by rule and line,/ Empty the haunted air, and gnomed
mine –/ Unweave a rainbow” (Keats 320f).
In December 1917, Keats attended Benjamin Haydon’s ‘immortal dinner’
during which Charles Lamb accused Haydon of including Newton’s head in his
painting “Christ’s Entry in Jerusalem” (cf. Dawkins 38f). This painting was,
according to Lamb, an affront since Isaac Newton “had destroyed all the poetry of
the rainbow by reducing it to the prismatic colours” (Dawkins 39). Keats agreed with
Lamb that a man like Newton would “reduc[e] life to physical organization”
(Gigante 442) and therefore bereave the world of its wonders. In 1919, Keats began
writing Lamia in which he took up the subject of the difficult relationship between
science and literature. The initial quotation promotes the assumption that in Lamia,
science is seen as something that strips poetry (and the arts in general) of its “beauty
and mystery” (Abrams 307). By “unweav[ing] the rainbow” (Keats/Cook 321) Sir
Isaac Newton had presumably destroyed the mysterious nature of the rainbow by
means of rationalism as one then knows about its ”woof, [its] texture” (Keats 320).
However, one can find ambiguous details in Lamia that put Keats’ position in
question. Under Apollonius’ eyes (Apollonius stands for reason and the urge to
define everything (Sandy 53)) Lamia’s beauty vanishes and she becomes a serpent
again. It could be argued that Apollonius saved Lycius (who is seen as a dreamer and
a fantasist) from the sinful and evil snake, rather than depriving him of his lover.
Although it might at first seem obvious that Keats is clearly emphatically siding
against the scientific position, against reason, this view turns out to be reductive (cf.
Midgley 55). Hence, even in Keats’ poetry, which primarily demonizes science and
the scientific progress, hints can be found that science is not that devilish after all.
The hypothesis that Keats’ view on science was not as exclusively negative as most
commonly assumed is further supported by the fact that Keats had studied at Guy’s
Hospital and was licensed to work as an apothecary (Keats/Cook xxxi). In himself,
Keats internalises the difficult relationship of science and literature.[...]
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Scientific Method and Rationalism in Enduring Love
2.1.Narrative Implementation
2.1.1. Language
2.1.2. Point of View
2.1.3. Reliability of the Narrator
2.2. Testing of Scientific Rationalism - ‘a little cage of reason’ or ‘a route to wonder’? ..
2.2.1. Rational Thought as ‘a wonderful aspect of our natures’
2.2.2. ‘Rationalism gone berserk’
2.3. Science, Literature and the Narrative
2.3.1. Science’s Need for Narration
2.3.2. Science as an Enrichment for Literature
2.3.3. Science Writing
3. Synthesis: ‘Rapprochement of the disciplines’
4. Conclusion
5. Works Cited
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