Analysis of Otho The Great - Act V

John Keats 1795 (Moorgate) – 1821 (Rome)



A part of the Forest.
Enter CONRAD and AURANTHE.
Auranthe. Go no further; not a step more; thou art
A master-plague in the midst of miseries.
Go I fear thee. I tremble every limb,
Who never shook before. There's moody death
In thy resolved looks Yes, I could kneel
To pray thee far away. Conrad, go, go
There! yonder underneath the boughs I see
Our horses!
Conrad. Aye, and the man.
Auranthe. Yes, he is there.
Go, go, no blood, no blood; go, gentle Conrad!
Conrad. Farewell!
Auranthe. Farewell, for this Heaven pardon you.
[Exit AURANTHE,
Conrad. If he survive one hour, then may I die
In unimagined tortures or breathe through
A long life in the foulest sink of the world!
He dies 'tis well she do not advertise
The caitiff of the cold steel at his back.
[Exit CONRAD.
Enter LUDOLPH and PAGE.
Ludolph. Miss'd the way, boy, say not that on your peril!
Page. Indeed, indeed I cannot trace them further.
Ludolph. Must I stop here? Here solitary die?
Stifled beneath the thick oppressive shade
Of these dull boughs, this oven of dark thickets,
Silent, without revenge? pshaw! bitter end,
A bitter death, a suffocating death,
A gnawing silent deadly, quiet death!
Escaped? fled? vanish'd? melted into air?
She's gone! I cannot clutch her! no revenge!
A muffled death, ensnar'd in horrid silence!
Suck'd to my grave amid a dreamy calm!
O, where is that illustrious noise of war,
To smother up this sound of labouring breath,
This rustle of the trees!
[AURANTHE shrieks at a distance.
Page. My Lord, a noise!
This way hark!
Ludolph. Yes, yes! A hope! A music!
A glorious clamour! How I live again! [Exeunt.

SCENE II. Another part of the Forest,
Enter ALBERT (wounded).
Albert. O for enough life to support me on
To Otho's feet
Enter LUDOLPH.
Ludolph. Thrice villainous, stay there
Tell me where that detested woman is
Or this is through thee!
Albert. My good Prince, with me
The sword has done its worst; not without worst
Done to another Conrad has it home
I see you know it all
Ludolph. Where is his sister?
AURANTHE rushes in.
Auranthe. Albert!
Ludolph. Ha! There! there! He is the paramour I
There hug him dying! O, thou innocence,
Shrine him and comfort him at his last gasp,
Kiss down his eyelids! Was he not thy love?
Wilt thou forsake him at his latest hour?
Keep fearful and aloof from his last gaze,
His most uneasy moments, when cold death
Stands with the door ajar to let him in?
Albert. O that that door with hollow slam would close
Upon me sudden, for I cannot meet,
In all the unknown chambers of the dead,
Such horrors
Ludolph. Auranthe! what can he mean?
What horrors? Is it not a joyous time?
Am I not married to a paragon
'Of personal beauty and untainted soul'?
A blushing fair-eyed Purity! A Sylph,
Whose snowy timid hand has never sin'd
Beyond a flower pluck'd, white as itself?
Albert, you do insult my Bride your Mistress
To talk of horrors on our wedding night.
Albert. Alas! poor Prince, I would you knew my heart.
'Tis not so guilty
Ludolph. Hear you he pleads not guilty
You are not? or if so what matters it?
You have escap'd me, free as the dusk air
Hid in the forest safe from my revenge;
I cannot catch you--You should laugh at me,
Poor cheated Ludolph, make the forest hiss
With jeers at me You tremble; faint at once,
You will come to again. O Cockatrice,
I have you. Whither wander those fair eyes
To entice the Devil to your help, that he
May change you to a Spider, so to crawl
Into some cranny to escape my wrath?
Albert. Sometimes the counsel of a dying man
Doth operate quietly when his breath is gone
Disjoin those hands part--part, do not destroy
Each other forget her our miseries
Are equal shar'd, and mercy is
Ludolph. A boon
When one can compass it. Auranthe, try
Your oratory your breath is not so hitch'd
Aye, stare for help
[ALBERT groans and dies.
There goes a spotted soul
Howling in vain along the hollow night
Hear him he calls you Sweet Auranthe, come!
Auranthe. Kill me.
Ludolph. No! What? upon our Marriage-night!
The earth would shudder at so foul a deed
A fair Bride, a sweet Bride, an innocent Bride!
No, we must revel it, as 'tis in use
In times of delicate brilliant ceremony:
Come, let me lead you to our halls again
Nay, linger not make no resistance sweet
Will you Ah wretch, thou canst not, for I have
The strength of twenty lions 'gainst a lamb
Now one adieu for Albert come away.
[Exeunt.


Scheme ABCDXBXXEXFGHXIBJIXKXHXXLJXXXBBGMNXXBDNXXXA AXOPXGQBEXXRLSXJNXXLXBSXPXXXXOTXAXXUCEEXGMEXNDKERBFXXDQXJXXKTUXEUXXXEXPXXXA
Poetic Form
Metre 011010 101001 11110101111 01010011100 11111101001 1101011101 010111111 1111011011 110010111 1010 101001 11111 11111111010 101 111110101 101 1011011101111 001010111 0110011101 111111110 011011111 1010 10101 110111111110 101011101110 1111111001 1001010101 11111101110 1001011101 010101001 0101010101 0111010011 1111010101 01010101010 1111010101 11110100111 110111111 110101 111010 11101 111 11101010 01001111011 1101011010 101010 101101110111 111 101 1110011 1111010101 11111 1011111 0111111011 1101010111 111111 111110 1100 110 111111011 1111011100 1101011111 111111111 11011111010 1100011111 1101010111 1101011110 101111110111 0111011101 0100110101 110 111111 1101110101 111101010 11001000101 0101110001 1101011101 0101011101 10110111110 11110110101 100111111111 11110 11111110 1111111101 1101111011 1001011101 1101111111 110110101 1111110111 11110111 1111010111 10101011111 1111010111 0111010111 100101010101 11010011111 111111101 11001010100 11010101 101 11110111 1100111111 1111 10101 110101 1001010101 11111111 111 1110110101 0111011101 01101111001 1111011101 01110010100 11111110101 1101110101 1111111111 0111010101 1101110101 1
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,262
Words 798
Sentences 111
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 43, 75
Lines Amount 118
Letters per line (avg) 28
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 1,676
Words per stanza (avg) 397
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on April 05, 2023

4:03 min read
129

John Keats

John Keats was an English Romantic poet. more…

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