Term Paper Dover Beach
Term Paper Dover Beach
Term Paper Dover Beach
Top sheet
Paper no-104
Topic- ‘Dover Beach’ as an elegy
‘Dover Beach’ as an elegy
‘’Adonais,’’ ‘’Dover Beach.’’ But obviously, if these poems are elegies, the
term has a very wide and vague signification. Naturally the elegies of this class
will be less simple and spontaneous, but more dramatic, more artistic, full of
splendid power, than those of the lyrists; still we must hold that elegiac poetry
falls properly fused with narrative or epic notes. In other words, the elegy ranks
as a subdivision of lyric poetry, with the ode, the song, and the sonnet. Elegy is
a key element in Arnold's poem and is also a part of his moral and intellectual
approach to life as known to and seen by him in the wake of the Industrial
elegiac note is also predominant in "Dover Beach" as usual. The poet is found to
lament here not for the death of any person, but for the loss of the simple faith
and for the loss of beauty and culture in the prevalent situation. He laments
poet of high seriousness, his poetry was entirely reflective. He does not shine in
constructing a story. He can express melancholy feeling with rare purity and,
Walker Hugh
Nothing in Arnold’s verse is more arresting than its elegiac element. It is not
too much to say that there is no other English poet in whom the elegiac spirit so
reigns as it does in him; he found in the elegy the outlet, of his native
the natural tone of an agnostic who is not jubilant, but regretful of its beauty,
Although the elegy originated as a very formal lament for the loss of a friend or
an important public or cultural person, in its broader sense, the elegy also
laments the loss of something important to the world. In ‘Dover Beach’, Arnold
‘Dover Beach’ was published in 1867 when the country England was torn
Arnold's melancholic view is distinct, penetrative, yet tender. Set against the
scenic charm of the Northern sea near Dover Beach, the poem contains a good
deal of gloomy reflections of modern life. But here, in this poem the sea is not
merely a background, but a symbol of religious faith and its 'grating roar'
symbolizes the decline of the faith. Being a Victorian pessimist to the core, the
poet perceives the crumbling away of religious faith during his time. He now
Its melancholy.
Nothing could be more profoundly melancholy than the present poem "Dover
Beach", "yet there is nothing maudlin, nothing unmanly about it. The poem
begins with very positive image. But at the next moment, Arnold returns to his
own self and feels the inherent meaning of the grating roar of pebbles which the
waves draw back and fling. Though the landscape is externally beautiful,
Arnold can penetrate the outward and sees the meaning of life within. He can
hear the eternal note of Sadness in it. This note of pensive melancholy gets the
immediately plunges into the world of the great Greek poet Sophocles who in
his great tragedies articulates the harrowing spectacles of human suffering. The
poet thinks that as he now stands on the sea shore of Dover and listens to the
“Sad music of humanity”, Here the suggestion uppermost is that suffering and
human life is, as if wedded to each other from long antiquity. Here Arnold
echoes the message of Goethe who declares that the other name of life is
suffering. Physically the poet stands on the Dover Beach and upon which the
moon shines fairly. But the moment he hearts the ‘tremulous cadence’ created
by the constant proceeding and reseeding of the pebbles, he can realize the
underlying tragic import of every human situation. The‘ turbid ebb and flows’
of human-miseries was first felt by Sophocles whom Arnold adores and admires
This is how, Arnold finds a close affinity between himself and this great Greek
scholar in realizing the meaning of life and articulating the same in poetry. The
third stanza of the poem provides a scatting criticism of society Arnold lives in.
considers nature as mother and guide, Arnold being awfully disturbed by the
acute spiritual crisis of the people of the age hears only melancholy strain of
nature
This earth, however beautiful, ceases to appear to the poet. On the other hand it
brings in a message of hopelessness and blank despair. Even the night wind
ennui the poet seeks to find a shape, anchorage in love. Addressing the beloved
the poet-speaker stresses the trueness and constancy in love which may afford
him sort of solace and comfort, for he finds hope nowhere. The world lies
before him looks like a land of dream, ready to deceive its dwellers. With the
faith withered away, men during Arnold’s time have become devoid of any love
Dover Beach that the whole poem popularly bears some stock explanations
which are difficult to supersede. However, the overall tone is elegiac meditation
and the treatment is purely modern surpassing Victorian time. One vital point
regarding Arnold’s melancholy is that it is not the melancholy that dejects and
depresses. It is not that melancholy that sucks ones strength and spirit, the
melancholy that palls with pessimism and leaves one with despair, but a wistful
feeling.