Thursday, September 19, 2019
As I Walked Out One Evening Essay -- Literary Analysis, W.H. Auden
W.H. Audenââ¬â¢s poem ââ¬Å"As I Walked Out One Eveningâ⬠belongs to the long tradition of poems chronicling the struggle between love and time. Like others, Audenââ¬â¢s lover uses images of ââ¬Å"The Flowerâ⬠(l. 19) and grandiose claims of love ââ¬Å"Till China and Africa meetâ⬠(l. 10) to impress or coax the unseen lover to comply with his wishes. However, Auden deviates from this tradition in other ways. For example, these other works are mainly seduction poems. In Andrew Marvellââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"To His Coy Mistressâ⬠, time is (by association) a third party to a seduction, invoked to create fear and put pressure on the seducà ©e by reminding her of her mortality- as well as the seducerââ¬â¢s own vulnerability, and thus goad her towards his own ends. ââ¬Å"As I Walked Out One Eveningâ⬠is a narrative poem, and essentially a dialogue between a lover speaking to the unseen love and time responding to counter his claims. Auden argues that people are unaware of the world they live in and do not truly understand what it means to love and live by usage of apocalyptic images and a running motive of both time and water. ââ¬Å"As I Walked Out One Eveningâ⬠was written in 1937, a time of turmoil throughout the world and especially in Europe: the world was in hiatus between ââ¬Å"the war to end all warsâ⬠and the second ââ¬Å"war to end all warsâ⬠and Hitler was at this time gradually rising in power. Auden was very aware of the political climate, and this is reflected in his diction in the latter part of the poem. The fact that there are three distinct parts to this poem, the loverââ¬â¢s speech and the two halves of timeââ¬â¢s speech, is indicative of the contemporary political clime: because the first World War was so horrifying many people could not believe and did not want to believe that it could happen aga... ... the poem: the observer who is a part of the scene and yet apart from it, who has a more distant perspective. In the first stanza, the exposition or setting, Auden uses the metaphor of ââ¬Å"The crowds upon the pavement/Were fields of harvest wheatâ⬠(ll. 3-4) as observed by the narrator to first foreshadow the immediacy of time. ââ¬Å"Harvest wheatâ⬠is both something living and something that is about to scythed and gathered en masse. The observer already has the knowledge that comes so painfully in stanza 14 for the lover, and in the end not only has ââ¬Å"the deep river ran onâ⬠(l. 60) but so has the narrator. They are still here, ââ¬Å"late in the eveningâ⬠(l. 57) to observe the river of life that is still running, even after ââ¬Å"the clocks had ceased their chimingâ⬠(l. 59) and ââ¬Å"the lovers they were goneâ⬠(l. 58), symbolizing that life will endure the ravages of both death and time.
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