Literator (Jul 2007)

<i>Philia</i> and <i>neikos</i> in Keats’s 'Song of four faeries'

  • A.C. Swanepoel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v28i1.153
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
pp. 105 – 120

Abstract

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Despite the fact that Keats’s “Song of four faeries” received very little critical attention, the poem raises interesting issues regarding the creative and destructive forces in nature. The poem presents a conversation between the four elemental faeries about union and separation. Using Empedocles’ four-element theory of creation and change in nature as framework, this article explores through close reading how the form and content of the poem mirror creative and destructive natural processes. It concludes that both Empedocles’ concepts “philia” (the creative force), and “neikos” (the destructive force), feature in both form and content, but that “philia” is more prevalent in the form, whereas “neikos” is expressed mostly in the content of the poem. Furthermore, the natural changes presented in the poem suggest themselves in the form of the poem before they become evident in its content.

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