t Madeline, too, doesn’t know what she is doing. By Porphyro doing all his little deceptions, he is violating her visionary imagination by just be even attempting to reach her. This is quite unacceptable. We can just see how Madeline’s belief in the night influences the decisions of others around her. The poem tries to endorse the world of visionary imagination or dreaming, however Keats effectively voids this out as shown through many of the examples illustrated before. What does come across is that the dream world can be spoiled by one very determined, conniving man, who will stop at nothing to try and get what he wants. That is a sexual experience with that he would probably nor normally have any chance at during normal times. So he has to trick her into doing something on a night to which she seem to have no control over, on one of the most mystical night of them all. The only reason that I can think of that she goes away with him at the end is not because she truly love him, but that she is starting to realize what she did. Now the only honorable thing to do is go away with him so that she doesn’t dishonor anyone. This is kind of ironic because it was the dishonor of Porphyro, which caused all this, and yet she is doing the honorable thing. Works Cited Page...