Friday, 9 May 2014

Friel Exam Question

Re-read Act 1 from page 38 (Father Jack enters.) to page 41 (Jack goes out to the garden. Kate gets her cardigan.) Explore the presentation of Jack's experience with African culture in this extract and elsewhere in the play.
Father Jack before going to Africa was a devout Catholic, like the majority of people in Ireland at the time. His job as a missionary, was to go and convert people to Catholicism, however Jack came back from Africa as a devout and associates himself with the paganism ways that they have, using the personal pronouns of "our" and "we". 
Within the extra we have our first insight to Jack's life in Africa, first being introduced to how he enters the room  the description of "(as if he were intent on some engagement elsewhere)". Friel would've included this intended subconscious action of Jack, to set the scene of his fragmented memory, but his mind set being so fixated of Africa that even back in Ireland, mentally he is in Africa. Jack first shocks Kate and the other sisters with the mentioning of "ancestral spirits" quite an abstract myth in society, but to Jack to mention it would suggest his belief in such things. One significant thing Jack mentions in his first description is "you have dancing" which to the girls we know is their secret desire, their use to escape from their suppressed lives in Ireland and the home they live (trapped) in. Jack's mentioning of dancing, I believe is significant because it evokes the thought and correlation of dance and paganism beliefs within the girls. So to be pagan or some ways apart (The lughnasa festival) is to have the freedom of dance. 
    The festival of Lughnasa is the closest form of a Paganism ritual to the girls, the description rose gives of the "ritual" of the sacrifice of the cow, is very similar to Jack's description of a typical night or celebration. "We kill a rooster or a young goat... It's very exciting" such care free actions expressed through Jack as he finds it "exciting" and we later learn the reason so they can "offer sacrifice to Obi, our great Goddess of the earth." This description of their actions, show the abstract beliefs the Pagan religion has, and the influence for such extreme measures to connect to a God which contrast completely with the simple 'mass' held within the Catholic religion. This also represents how little of any Catholic beliefs Jack doesn't even have left.
     Within the play we see some forms of hostility emerging between Kate and Jack through their differences in beliefs in religion. Kate representing the strong, devout Catholic and Jack representing the free spirited Pagan : this reflects on the conflicts of Catholicism and Paganism in Ireland since the 5th century when British missionaries came over to convert the original pagans to Catholicism, since then it has been the main religion in Ireland but the original pagan beliefs, rituals and festivals still remain among the minorities. When the conversation of Michael pops up, in Jacks terminology Michael is a "love child", on learning this, Jack questions "have you any other love children?". To find have Kate snap back "She certainly has not". As the different religions, to Kate and Catholics a "love child" is against the norms and written rules, as it means it's a baby out of wedlock, but to Jack and the others in Africa, it is the norm as apparently "in Ryanga women are eager to have love children" with the belief of the more you have the more "fortunate your household is thought to be". This example clearly states the conflict created because of religious views, of which Friel is showing the ignorance of people not tolerating others views. 
Within the extract, Jack describes how his commissioner refers to him as the "Irish outcast"  and always try to get him away so he isn't "going native", here Jack is believing he is apart of them, when to everyone his he is just the outcast.  The irony displayed in Jack's character is huge, Jack's job to be a missionary to change peoples religions, however he went to Africa intending to change theirs when it turned out he did go native, his religion and views were changed. When we are first introduced to Jack in the beginning of Act 1, after his introduction to the play we they are then shown insights to the outside world. Obviously Jack's character is one that was able to escape to the outside world, but he brings it back with him and this influence sets the sisters minds to their own knowledge or links to the outside world. The girls thoughts are taken to "Bernie Odonnel" her new husband from "Stockholm", "Curley Mcdaid", significantly Maggie's nostalgic reflection of her memory of dancing. Which all together, shows how Jack's presence back home has brought the outside world, and an aura of paganism- which reflects on freedom and escapism, so it encourages the sisters to think of the outside world, of people with lives they could themselves have. 
 As we know pre-dating the 5th century Irish Paganism was the main religion in the country, and even today when Catholicism is, minorities still practice the pagan ways. Jack said later on in the play, that "Mother and myself, every Lughnasa would go to the annual ritual", which shows previous on in his life he has a part in paganism, enough to be suppressed by the heavy Catholicism beliefs in his job as a priest, but enough to be brought back to the surface of his mind and believe in the Pagan ways, through his time in Africa. Which could show as a person, how weak Jack is, not to carry on being devout to his religion but to be easily turned to another one. So could the change in Jack's beliefs be the reason why he was sent home as well as his impending death?
Jack's time in Africa describes of everything against Catholic views/beliefs: rituals, sacrifices, love children, Obi Goddess of the Earth, ancestrial spirits, all of which Jack strongly believes in and even home until he dies believes in. We know this because in Michael's speech towards the end, as "he never said Mass again". 

Monday, 5 May 2014

How to Larkin and Abse present History in

Compare the ways in which Larkin and Abse write about history

History is all about time and change, the good, the bad; both poets explore events, that changed the world forever. In Larkin's MCMXIV we see how the first world war affected the home front, as well as the world as "such innocence" is forever gone. Also in Abse, A letter at Ogmore, shows the extreme events of the 20th century take a personal effect on him, but questions is it the end of it all "has a past always a future?". Thus, both poets are neither critical nor supportive of what happened, yet remembering. which is initially a definition of history.
MCMXIV reflects upon a time where war was perceived as an adventure, men "grinning" as they are about to embark upon their new adventure as if it was a day of "bank holiday lark". Larkin writing the poem years after the war, shows the dramatic irony/ironic sense to the men's excitement for war, by the knowledge of knowing what they are going to endure. Death, which juxtaposes the initial excitement. Larkin also notices the change that war brings, and how it was so subtle that it occurred "without a word", somewhat like the war did upon the people. Larkin personifies the country side as not caring about the war, at the time aristocracy ruled the land, with it's "servants" and ""limousines" contrasted to a different world that hadn't been affected by war. Larkin here is showing how at the beginning of the 20th century, the division of the social class system not yet affected by the revolutionary change of war. In the final stanza, Larkin juxtaposes the stanza in a split of the men before the war and the men after. The history of the two, where the split is a metaphor for the change that revolutionised a whole generation. How the "innocence" was never seen before, which is a reflection onto the completely new warfare used, shocking the majority of people due to the death rate. However, the last line "never such innocence again" reinforces the idea of a world that was easily lived for those in the aristocracy, the simple working lives, would no longer be known as the change showed a new independent life for all.
Adrundel Tomb is also a reflection of the passing of time, and the change that it brings. The centre piece of the poem is the tomb stone of the an old pre 17th century earl and his wife, this tomb reflect on their money, enabling them to set in stone, their history, their name and their love.The passing of time is visibly described through the "blurred" faces, which here shows that the things in history that aren't important "blur" away, which contrasts to MCMXIV as the first world war is forever remembered. Larkin shows mild cynicism in saying "they would not think to lie so long".. suggesting that the couple wouldn't have expected their legacy to last a hundred years, let alone five hundred. Larkin's tone changes midway, similarly in MCMXIV when looking at the significance of the gesture in the statues (observing the loss of innocence). Holding hands has been the spotlight of attraction on the tomb, for this detail has survived the erosion of time, which shows the strength in their undying love, alternatively in MCMXIV the love of the country (patriotism) kept people strong throughout the war. In Larkin's last line of the poem, "what will survive is love" is sometimes a sentimental misreading, but to anyone interpretation it can mean anything. In MCMXIV even though the innocence was gone, the love carried on, through the a bad course of time.
Abse too relfects on history, he however, unlike Larkin, shows a more nostalgic reflection on the 20th centry in A Letter From Ogmore. The poem is about his farewell to the 100 years, and being born in the 20's he has first hand experience of growing up in a quick revolutionised, modern world. Looking upon the good and the bad, the repetition of "good bye 20th century" suggesting that all that has occurred is now history. Abse starts off by looking at two significant events of the 20th century, "Hiroshima" and "Auschwitz", both of which occurred in world war two, but war here acting as a catalyst of awareness to make sure the holocaust doesn't ever happen again, but it's also the catalyst of modern weaponry, every country today now in possession of a nuclear weapon. Abse goes on to referring to the "genealogy of ghosts" how time passes, the amount of death within the century is kept alive through memory, in which links to his personification of Eros (the desire to live) supporting the idea of the dead alive in memory.  Abse questions whether or not "has the past always a future" simply stating will such events ever occur again? or with one of the main significances of history being the aspect that we learn from our mistakes and ensure they never repeat. On a personal note, the haunting remark of  "will there always be a Jack boot on the stair?" reference to the Nazi's war crimes of the answer to the Jewish question, which this boot for Abse is always a personal reminder of what the people of his religion, family member potentially went through and will always subconsciously go through. Within the final paragraph, a summery of the century, it's commercialisation and with the metaphor or the sea at Ogmore, represents humanity - with tide in, humanity covered up is "beautiful" "various" and "old", but with tide out, it is "Vexed",  "external" and "Murderous". In which this ties in with MCMXIV as reinforces Larkin's idea of "Never such innocence again".
Abse's Cousin Sidney highlights the effects of war on a personal level. It's a poem about his cousin, Sidney, who with his "size 12 shoes" and achievement of being "tallest boy in his class" is able to lie about his age and sign up to war (1940 so beginning of world war 2". Sidney's rebellious, carefree nature is shown in stanza 1 where he "break his garden swing, jumping on it", could also show his uncontrollable excitement for war in general. Lieing about his age, here too shows the initial excitement for war, the adventure he will partake in. Similarly, in MCMXIV where the first stanza shows the eager men heading for war.. The dramatic irony in both authors, as they both know the horrors of war, and even Abse at the time might not, but writing the poem would do. Sidney is referred to as a "silly ass" by his family as the know he has made the wrong decision, this shows that through time, the opinions of going to war have changed, less encouraged. We find out that he is killed in the battle of Dunkirk, and the emotional effects it has on Sidney's family, "raw in onion air" which is a metaphor used to show the constant uncontrollable crying. Abse here is showing how war singularly affected everyone, how it is a unforgettable moment- supporting his "genealogy of ghosts" in A Letter from Ogmore, how the dead live on in memories throughout history.
Both poets have shown how history changes through time, significant events change the way histories course is heading, and it enables us to learn from mistakes and come out strong so they don't happen again. Adrunel Tomb illuminates MCMXIV the passing of time, with the significance of a single event, on time, however strong it is stay for as  long as it will. And Abse's Cousin Sydney shows how war singles out men to fight, their enthusiasm hasn't changed from MCMXIV to Cousin Sydney, but also how in the long run, the horrible events live on and "never" forgotten.


Monday, 7 April 2014

MCMXIV

This poem is focused on the change that the first world war brings in society, economically, politically.  The first stanza shows the sheer excitement of those men who are willing to go to to war "grinning" you can imagine with such excitement to do so. Larkin describes them waiting to go to war, as if they are to go wait to play a sport in "the oval" (cricket), suggesting that at the start war was merely a game. The attitudes of the men, are suggested to be like those on "an August bank holiday lark", showing how the men had a lack of seriousness to what they were about to embark upon. The form of dramatic irony within the reader, as we all know the terrors to which the men were about to go and face.
The second stanza the times of 1914, where "farthings and sovereigns" were still in use, along with the "shut shops" with the old "bleached established names on the sun-blinds" which show how the war have closed businesses and took effect on the average persons every day life. There were no children clothing at the time, so they wore adults clothing in smaller sizes but were the "dark-clothed", the darkness could suggest how no life or light will return until those on the front do and the  war is over.
How the children called "after Kings and Queens", in which at this time Britain was still and empire, where George's, Edward's roamed the land.
The t"tin advertisements" are a form of hope, a form of life for the soldiers on the front, a source of energy ad food, in which the "pubs wide open all day" bringing a sense of community to all people at home, where they can gather and share hope together.
The third stanza shows how Larkin has personified the countryside for not caring about war. The dust lingering within this stanza, is the dust of the lives before the war, the houses to which the lords and ladies lived in, with luncheons and dinner parties,, where there was a stark contrast between the upper class ad the urban working, but war finds a way to bring it all together. However, in this stanza the contrast yet still remains, "the differently dressed servants" who still work in the manor houses. In a way could show how the war has yet to reach the country side. Personally, I thought the reference to the "shadowing Domesday lines" was a reference to the front lines of the war, that the war had been brought home and this manor house with servants, where the house had been turned into  a convalescence home for the soldiers.
The final stanza emphasizes the innocence/ignorance to the upcoming war. With the repetition of the word "never" to suggest how the soldiers, the people at home have not yet witnessed such modern advanced warfare. "As changed itself to past without a word" shows how the change in the world occurred without even a mention to such, it merely happen on its own account. The juxtaposition of "the men" who leave their "gardens tidy" and their marriages "lasting a little while longer", showing how war prolongs the good at home, the problems that may have been faced before war, are now swept under  the carpet as faith and hope keep everyone strong.
The final line of the poem, "never such innocence again", suggests the generalization upon the whole nation, the generation of the time. The advancements that this new warfare brought, showed the men on the front the disastrous events, e.g The Battle of the Somme July 1916, saw nearly 60,000 British men wounded and dead, the people on the home front the families having to read such horrors that occurred in this war, tore away any protection of innocence the Victorian/Edwardian eara's had set in place, society had it's turning point to the modern everyday life that we now live in. 

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Talking in bed

Love is an important factor in physical and emotional relationships- the good things that love brings along with bitter ones and disappointment. The sense of broken communication and isolation is well displayed through the structure and form of the poem. Rhyming ABA CAC DCD, and a final tercet rhyming EEE, what portray the absence of continuity and the broken-up nature of the couple's discourse.
As Larkin suggests, “It becomes more difficult to find / Words once true and kind”, it could be difficult for these two people to express verbally how they feel or it could be also possible that they spoke about the relationship, which has hurt them emotionally and they created the isolation, although words kind and true both relate with human language in positive manner. The double negative not + un “Or not untrue and not unkind”  leaves the reader ambiguous feeling of unfulfilled desire. Very similar situation is “At this unique distance from isolation”, suggesting that someone can be distanced from isolation and ironically very close at the same time.
Larkin’s poem “Talking in bed” enables us to relate to possible common experiences in our own lives and provoke us to think about both – the gap between expectations and reality – and irony of love in modern world. However, an irony, one of the dominant features in this poem, gives us the opportunity to create our own perception of love. I think Larkin believed that love is a positive thing, but we all know that reality makes nothing simple and often confront us with painful disappointment.

Dancing at Lughnasa

Irish Catholicism, its rituals and rules and its resonances within the family and as well as the clashes it produces.  
Notes collected
The play is set in a small rural community in the north of Ireland in the early 20h century. The power of the Catholic religion is evident in this small community. There are also certain pagan practices mentioned such as the Festival of Lughnasa where a young boy was burned in a type of ritual. 
Just as the radio is a partly foreign and potentially corrupting influence in the Mundy cottage, so the homecoming of Father 
Jack brings with it alien and challenging ideas and behaviour. Jack, for years a source of great pride as Ballybeg’s ‘own leper priest’, has transgressed his role in Ryanga and ‘gone native’. He has come to accept and even embrace the traditional rituals and way of life which seem to work well for the Ryangan villagers. And within this acceptance is an implicit critique of the Catholic missionary model, an understanding that it would fail to meet the spiritual and emotional needs of the community of lepers. Elsewhere too Friel is interested in the failure of institutional Christianity to be a force for good in the lives of its followers. In Dancing at Lughnasa, Kate comes to reconcile her strict Catholic beliefs with her brother’s behaviour by classifying it as ‘his own distinctive search’. The rest of the community, however, is less forgiving. The local priest, who is also Kate’s employer, sacks her from her job as schoolteacher, ostensibly because of falling class sizes, but in reality as a punishment for Jack’s renegade behaviour. In doing so he plunges the entire Mundy household into deepening poverty.Father Jack’s Ugandan experiences are not the only source of paganism in the play. At Lughnasa time, the back hill locals of Ballybeg practice a ceremony involving dancing, fire, and animal sacrifice, just like Jack’s African rituals. Maire MacNeill’s book The Festival of Lughnasa explores Celtic and pre-Christian harvest rituals and how they continued in 
Ireland into modern times (see page 13 of this pack). While there is no evidence of goat sacrifice in the 20th century – as 
Rose dramatically describes – the practice of large groups gathered to sing and dance on hilltops is well documented. 
Yet in the 1920s and 30s – the early years of the new Irish Free State – even such seemingly innocent and traditionally 
Celtic activities came to be frowned upon by an increasingly conservative church and state, and would not long survive into 
the century. 
Christianity is strongly present in these stories, but sometimes sits alongside or is seen in conflict with traditional Celtic or 
pagan ways. The archive records the final decades of the old way of life in rural Ireland, before technology and industrialisation would 
change things forever.



Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Red Balloon

The red balloon throughout the poem is a symbol of religion, the non Jews of this poem believe it to be "stained with our dear Lord's blood", but I think that the balloon stands as a symbol for the blood lost in the Jewish race, and the strength it endured as "it would not burst" suggesting it is somewhat unstoppable.
As the persona has this balloon enter his life as it "oddly" landed where he stood, he passed onto it life, but "breathing on it " and "polished" it, thus giving a red that "shone like living blood". This foreshadowing the interpretation of the symbol of the "Lord's blood", but it could also be the persona's blood, as if he brought it to life, it could have his life captured within it.
It attracted attention, the persona's emotions mixed towards the balloon, but with maturity "it ceased to be a toy" thus showing that its not something he can play with, it's something he must treasure and look after. The persona later on starts to refers it as a "precious" where it is now something of great value to him, where it's so important that the persona "to no one dare show it" but in contrast will boast about it.
The ignorance and mockery shown within the conversation between the persona and the 'best friend', degrade the balloon to label of "Jew" with the persona defending the relevance to that. The final stanza shows the attempts to destroy the balloon, "their dirty knives" "lunged" "clawed" at the balloon, but it wouldn't burst. You could relate this to some previous events that have happened in the Jewish history, for example, the holocaust, the Jewish race were discrimated, persecuted against by an entire country, they were killed, tortured in the attempt to wipe the race out, but the outcome of it all? It didn't happen, where the strength of them carried on to live after all they had been through, their "living blood" kept pumping through their race.

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Wild Oats

This poem is based upon the only woman Larkin came close to marriage with: his first girlfriend Ruth Bowman. She had a friend called Jane, who is the model for the “bosomy English rose”, while sixteen-year-old Ruth was “her friend in specs I could talk to”.The title ‘Wild Oats’ comes from a common euphemism for sex: an encouragement for boys to go out and ‘saw some wild oats’ – sleep with lots of women before getting serious. During the 1950s, there was still a real dichotomy between males and females: men were encouraged to ‘get out there’, while women were advised to remain chaste.Considering ‘A Study of Reading Habits’ and Larkin, though, this seems a somewhat ironic title: no matter the adolescent fantasies of the persona in ‘A Study’, Larkin doesn’t seem the type to have cast many. Immediately in this poem, the persona is intimidated by the “rose” and “it was the friend I took out”. In the second stanza, he believes he “met beautiful twice” and he is convinced that both times “she was trying” “not to laugh”. It shows again the low self-confidence, unlike the “wild oats”.
The relationship went on for “seven years” and even as far as engagement, “Gave a ten-guinea ring,” but in the end it didn’t last. The persona’s colloquial attitude to the giving is rather dismissive anyway, and the whole poem is tongue-in-cheek. In real life, Larkin was quite cruel to Ruth, and the conclusion is probably what she said of Larkin, “That I was too selfish, withdrawn, / And easily bored to love.” Again, the persona is dismissive and tongue-in-cheek in response to this: “Well, useful to get that learned.”
Though this is a reflection on the past of “about twenty years ago”, the persona still has “two snaps / Of bosomy rose with fur gloves on”. The persona comes to the trivial conclusion, in that he is still single, that they are “unlucky charms”. Yet, as with many of Larkin’s poems, the last word discredits this light-hearted conclusion: “perhaps.” Perhaps those “snaps” are “unlucky charms”, but perhaps there is a much darker, more serious reason for the ‘Mr Bleaney’-like existence.

Self's the Man

In the setting of a lymeric, here used to convey the humerus  tone set within the poem, which is shown in the rhyme scheme, AB CD. 
The poem starts off with -Oh, no one can deny / That Arnold is less selfish than I”. The colloquial “oh” gives a sense of how he brushes it off, and he seems to be boastful of his selfishness. Into the next few lines, he presents a stereotypical image of marriage as entrapment, “married a woman to stop her getting away” and the ironic aside, ‘Now she’s there all day” as though his “less selfish” friend didn't know what he was letting himself into. Notice how he refers to her as a mere “woman” – not a lover, and there seems to be, at least from the persona’s perspective, no love in the relationship.
The hyperbolic language used to describe the 'stereotypical' marriage in the following stanzas, "he has no time at all" suggesting how  the marriage is so consuming,Arnold, has no time to himself, the metaphor of "it's put a screw in this wall" is somewhat what the marriage has done to him. He has been screwed to the wall of marriage, where time, alone, selfishness, cease not to exist, merely hanging around him but unreachable. Here we can get a sense of sympathy from the persona to Arnold, where he then goes onto comparing "his life and mine" makes the persona feel "a swine" (feeling like an unpleasant person", and the realization bestowed upon him that Arnold is "less selfish" than the persona. But continues to justify that marriage is selfish, that "not just pleasing his own friends" suggests that he is pleasing the one he loves, the woman he chose to marry, and surely that is not selfish to say the least. 
But in the final stanza, a conclusion made by the persona, that "he and I are the same" simply meaning that in oth their lives, they made the selfish decision to do what they wanted to get out of life. But the persona knows "what he can stand" meaning that a marriage, children and the commitments to that are not what he could manage. 

Ambulances

A meditation on the closeness of death, its randomness and its inevitability. These three ideas are captured for Larkin in the action of ambulances in the city. Today young people might see ambulances as a sign of hope, a positive intervention sustaining life rather than heralding death. When the poem was written in the 
fifties, to be carried away in an ambulance was a sign of worse to come. Ambulances is, in its totality, a celebration of the values of consciousness. It modestly and devoutly collects evidence of ordinary life to create a truth which can be universally acknowledged. The poem is a depressing one. The very title suggests something saddening. Ambulances drive through a city street, and stop to pick up a critically sick man and take him to a hospital.
 Everybody looks at an ambulance when it is driving through the streets, though an ambulance does not look back at anybody. The sick man has been taken away to a hospital and the sense of loss which the spectators might have experienced would then abruptly come to an end. The man, who has been carried to the hospital by the ambulance, had led a meaningful life which was a mixture of family relationships and an observance of the fashions of the time. But that life has now come to an end and has, in fact, lost all its meaning.


The main idea in this poem is that an ambulance signifies illness, and that it fills the spectators with the thought of death. The first two stanzas of the poem contain vivid and realistic imagery of the ambulances threading their way through the streets of a city possibly at noon-time when there are many loud noises coming from the traffic and from the crowds of people. When an ambulance comes to a stop, women coming from the shops look at the wild white face of the sick man who is being taken away to a hospital. The remaining three stanzas of this poem contain the poet’s reflections and meditations on the sad fate which awaits all of us. The entire life of an individual loses its meaning in the face of his approaching death. What gives to the poem Ambulances its impressive authority is its relentless insistence that “all streets in time are visited,” and its closing assertion that to be taken away by an ambulance “brings closer what is left to come, /And dulls to distance all we are.” 
The first two stanzas of this poem contain vivid and realistic imagery of the ambulances threading their way through the streets of a city possibly at noon-time when there are many loud noises coming from the traffic and from the crowds of people. When an ambulance comes to a stop, women coming from the shops look at the wild white face of the sick man who is being taken away to a hospital. There is a realistic detail about the women coming from the shops, “past smells of different dinners,” meaning that these women have passed several food-shops which were emitting odours of different kinds. The remaining three stanzas of this poem contain the poet’s reflections and meditations on the sad fate which awaits all of us. The entire life of an individual loses its meaning in the face of his approaching death. There is a vivid picture also in the line: “The traffic parts to let go by”. When an ambulance is driving through a street, the people move quickly to one side or the other in order to make way for the ambulance.

Monday, 17 March 2014

At Ogmore-by-sea this August

Me and Alex looked at this poem during the lesson the other day, here was my summery. 
At Ogmore-by-sea this August evening is a poem exploring the ideas of the rhythmic settings of music, show business and a storm.  Personally, I believe the poem is  a personification of a storm commencing, expressed through the highs and lows of music but also the sense of magic in the way that it changes/effects all.

The first stanza begins with the somewhat calmer setting, where it is compared with the “obstinate violin” showing the flowing/softness of the notion of the river, which is introduced through the “estuary”. The “estuary” symbolising the beginning into the journey into the sea, one of which his father potentially embarked upon (could be a symbol of death).  The tone set in this stanza is atmospherically created through the setting of the evening, where it appears to be "darker than the darkening evening" the pathetic fallacy used to create an eary sense to this calming stanza, creating a juxtaposition between the two. A spiritual sense is introduced with the violin and violinist becoming "unified" to a sense of completing one another.
The second stanza's tempo becomes more upbeat, the sense of "such power" creates a build up of an omnipotent spiritual flow throughout each sentence. The power is influenced in the motif of the music, where it "summons the night", tying in with the idea of the "darkening evening". Some would see it as romantic, but looking into the meanings of the poem, it appears to be more of an elegy to Abses own father.  The notion of moving further forward is created with the pronoun "prow", but heading into a "pale familiar" could this be suggesting death again? A pale, being linked to light and some say when you die you 'go to the light', but this isn't the end of this metaphoric journey.
The third stanza is silent, in this one the music has stopped and in the composure of music it could be the scene building up the suspense for the grand finale. It shows how the "tides in" and "no foghorns howl", comparing the horn to a dog when it mourning howl. Our persona, is either here having a spiritual sense to that he can see his father, maybe it's the memory of being in his £favourite place" and the silence of this stanza is reflecting on the silence of death and the afterlife. Abse has a phase of reminiscing about his father, which is somewhat like Larkin does with his own mother.
The final stanza, is the big finale, where the "senseless conjuration" is enhanced throughout it- with the metaphoric use of the verb, the persona continues to "wipe my smile away", as he witnesses "his steleton stands" as this "carnival" "spotlight fails", showing the end of the journey and death. The personified shock of the "lighthouses" conversation, which is in comparison to "of the tumult the sea", which is the loud, confused noise especially cause by a large mass of people, which could also be the sea of souls, that this metaphoric storm has taken with it.

The Malham Bird

The Malham bird of Eden, is a Jewish tale, that is obeyed the commandment not to eat of the forbidden fruit and so lives forever in paradise- meaning that it cannot experience the true values to life and what it has to offer, for example, emotions, children, marriage, friends.
In the first stanza Abse is explaining how his new start to their marriage as a start in the "reinvented" world, suggesting paradise has been bestowed upon the pair in their new life. He compares himself as a "jew" and his wife as a "gentile" who is not a jew.
He starts off the second stanza as "Dear wife" which shows how much he cares by writing to her and showing her how he remembers all the tiny details about their first holiday. The tiniest details such as "the hidden beach" .. "the same seagull that seemed portent" all show that the smallest details have been remembered, which means its a significant memory that he treasures dearly.
The 3rd stanza shows how one minute they're lying together and the metaphor of the "chalk lines kiss" shows the end of their paradise and how it slowly "disappears". This shows how things can change quickly, they're there one minute and then gone the next.
The persona then goes onto reflecting upon the tale of the Malham Bird, and how that the singing" shows that almost the birds are happy with the choice of disobeying the commandment, it is a metaphor of the fact that everyone will make different decisions. The bird here sybolises the fact that it is all about making the right choice : This bird that they have met has followed the rules yet they talk about "all of the birds" singing and making the right choice. The idea of paradise, Abse has tied in with the idea of "immortal" that it can live on forever in the "gardens of Paradise". The motif of death, used somewhat like Larkin, but used with a positive connotation on the fact that there is something to believe in, some form of happiness after death.

Last Visit to 198 Cathedral Road

In this poem we see the persona returning to an old house , somewhere he would've once called home. The persona is reexamining the room, he sat in his fathers arm chair whilst he "hosed" the objects in the room with his "surgeons pocket torch". The second stanza, seems to be brought alive with the poets use of personification, where we see a vase that "yawned hideously", along with "the awakened empty fruit bowl", they all share the same fear of light known as "photophobic". By using personification, the poet could be showing the suggesting that he isn't alone in this room and all the objects have a  personal connection towards him. A sense of "omnipotent" starts off the 3rd stanza,  when the darkness the persona returns too, showing the "room that was out of breath" and that ties in well adjective at the end of the stanza "nothing".

Monday, 10 March 2014

Dannie Abse - A Winter Visit

A Winter Visit is a poem telling the memory of Abse walking with this mother through a local park- We are introduced to pathetic fallacy in the first stanza with the "before it's dark" scene of the night sky, which entails the rest of the poems tone of death.
Abse's mother "aged" and "frail" mother, is compared to the peacock- in this poem the peacock is an emblem of life and spirit. The contrast in the fascination of the fact the peacock's "sperm" can "spring forth all the colours of a peacock's tail" which is a symbol of something so small being able to create something so significant and special, which in a way is similar to his own mother as she is significant and special to Abse, and her life is half way to its end. In the following stanza she explains how "this winter i'm half dead" and Abse dramatizes the difference between his personal life as a soon to be orphaned son, but a doctor who witnesses death day in day out. He knows that his "white coat" does not even make him "qualified to weep".
In the final stanza, the flamingos, distracting Abse away from the harsh reality of death, looks at how their "heads beneath wings" which could symbolise their hiding away the he cold weather, hiding away from reality, to which Abse's wishes he could do too.

Sunday, 9 March 2014

Dockery and Son

Dockery and Son is a poem which explores the memories brought back by an old school friend, but with them, the unfocused attention set upon the passing of years and the value he has given his life. 
The poem explores the theme of Larkin with his obvious lack of offspring, but does the impression he gives about Dockery and his son, make it seem that Larkin wishes to have that life or is glad he does not To Larkin (or the persona) the perspective on children is seen as a "dilution" showing that it just makes us weaker- and carrying on into his philosophical shift of questioning the true meanings to where the "innate assumptions" for a child come from? Psychologically speaking, they're adapted through behavioral methods that we are brought up with, which could simply reflect upon a bad childhood experience Larkin had which has lead to this un-wanting attitude for offspring. 
    The epiphany Larkin has throughout his poem are of the facts that, life goes quickly, chances you make determine your life, and you can't go back on life choices, all of which point the the question of "what is it all for?" The unclear choices somewhat like "sand-clouds" to which are "thick and close" all point towards the "end of age", which in Dockery and Son represents death. Death of if you believe in heaven, hell or redemption, then your choices will have a purpose if not, then Larkin/ Persona is trying to contemplate the very reason to why you would have children, if it were to please you in the afterlife or the present life.
    The enjambment in the poem suggests a sense of continuity and flow. A life lived without significant hallmarks(wife,child), which resulted in the persona feeling empty with a hint of regret. The poem is a critical poem, Larkin does not find his lack of a son alarming-it simply leads him to the conclusion that life changing decisions emerge from mindless, thoughtless styles-"which something hidden from us chose".

Friday, 14 February 2014

Here

Here is another Larkin poem where we see him embark upon a train journey- but from the start of the poem to the end the train is gradually slowing down. The first stanza is a negative outlook on the man made urban town/city that Larkin is witnessing, with it's "gull-marked mud" the fields were too "thin and thistled to be called meadows". This stanza also shows the speed of the train, how it is constantly "swerving" and it links in parallel to the rivers "slow presence". 
Stanza 1 and 2 both juxtapose each other as they show the difference between the urban man made and the rural landscape. The mechanical shift within this stanza is shown through the list of typical 'wants' in life. The "electric mixers, toasters, washers" are the domestic necessities in life- the "desires". We see how this town/city is busy industrially with the "crain cluster", "barge-crowded water" all symbolism the modern growth in mechanical usage, which is why this stanza is in stark contrast with the first one due to the change in time.

Monday, 10 February 2014

Dannie Abse

Dannie Abse is a poet, author, doctor and playwright, in 2012 he was nominated an CBE for his services to literature and poetry.  Brought up in Cardiff, Abse draws on both his Welsh roots and Jewish inheritance but is above all famous for combining the twin careers of author and doctor. It is said that Most poets have an acute sense of mortality but Abse's professional life as a doctor gives him a more precise and intimate perspective than most. Abse is seen to use the influence of Phillip Larkin within his poetry. 

Sunday, 9 February 2014

The Whitsun Weddings

This poem is about the may bank holiday, we see how the person is travelling to London via train and on the way he witnesses new married couples embarking upon their honeymoons as husband and wife. Each stanza reflects on the where the train stops, the enjambment is where the train is moving and the end stop is it stopping : the train becomes a metaphor for movement.
In the 3rd and 4th stanzas we see how the persona had a negative judgement towards the family of the first bride and groom he encounters. The onomatopoeia of "whoops" and "skirls" describes the crowd of people cheering, the positive connotations of the adjectives used make it sound happy, simply through the words. The persona then goes onto a mockery tone of them all how they are "in parodies of fashion" and are all "posed irresolutely", the persona looks down onto them as they are simply common people.As the train moves on, the persona encounters more families where "confetti and advice were thrown" along with the girls being like a "happy funeral" this simile/oxymoron could symbolize the mourning of the unhappiness that marriage brings, the youth of the couple gone, independence, freedom all taken through the bond of love.
Towards the end of the poem we see the persona go into a philosophical meaning of experience of how the "arrow shower" represents the train moving them into the future, but the future is forcast is "rain". The pathetic fallacy can suggest the relief and refreshment of a new life together,and how rain in nature is the helping to grow a new life.

Saturday, 8 February 2014

Larkin focuses on the individualism of life- being alone with on'e company seems to be more satisfying than with the ordeal of a family lifestyle. Reflecting on the individual company, the passion for jazz music acting as an isolated block from other. Loneliness pervades him, as many woman come and go into his life, with little or big significance but they merely fill the empty hole in his lonely heart? The speaker throughout the poems is usually Larkin? We've seen where it could be his mother, or Larkin interpreting a view point that he had witnessed. Also, the structure of the poems are reflected on the attitude of the poem, the tone generates the structure. If its rigid or flowing it reflects on his inner emotion to it, along with the rhyme scheme, Larkin adds the same effect.