Thursday, October 10, 2019
Compare the ways in which Philip Larkin and Carol Ann Duffy present the theme of death and its implications on life
The concept of death and its implications are explored extensively by Larkin and Duffy, both poets agreeing that the destructive quality of death makes void of all the time and effort we invest in life. Larkin seems to demonstrate a cold fear towards this inevitability by distancing himself from the reality in ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢, choosing to make resigned but philosophical points on the subject. Duffy, by contrast, invests in a far more emotional approach and suggests how the finality can bring a strange sense of comfort amidst the devastation; this is demonstrated in the poems ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ and ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢ where the personas vow to never repeat their deathly experiences again, and, in the case of ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ in particular, use death as a means to exact revenge. ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢ are described as vehicles that both literally transport the dying, and are the anthropomorphised psychopomps who help establish the transitory stage between life and death. The fairly archaic yet idiomatic verb phrase ââ¬Ëborne awayââ¬â¢ and the use of determining modifiers in ââ¬Ëany kerb: / All streetsââ¬â¢ suggests that death is a ubiquitous and ghostly presence that transcends time and takes life indiscriminately. Thus, Larkin achieves a grave mood and an aloof tone which suggests the easy dissolution of identity and personality in the face of death. Duffy similarly presents the event of death in ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢, but unlike Larkinââ¬â¢s distance, the persona here takes control with the modal auxiliary in ââ¬ËI will writeââ¬â¢ and demands recognition from their attempted suicide: ââ¬ËFamous. The delivery as an emotional dramatic monologue helps serve the speakerââ¬â¢s appeal to victimhood, as they use a bitter and increasingly vindictive tone to justify their heinous sin of ââ¬Ëdespairââ¬â¢. This cry for attention thus suggests the instinctive egoism of humans, much like the bystanders in ââ¬ËAmbulancesà ¢â¬â¢ who, despite witnessing a tragedy, ââ¬Ëwhisper at their own distressââ¬â¢. In contrast, death in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ incites abstract musings on the meaning of life and depicts Larkinââ¬â¢s autobiographical account of attending the memorial service of an old college acquaintance.What is the difference between a figurative and a literal analogy? The poem is introduced in medias res, ââ¬ËDockery was junior to you..? ââ¬â¢ but the disinterested speaker quickly dissolves into a nostalgic reverie as he explores the fatalistic reality that is often followed after death. The lack of consolation in living is demonstrated when Larkin attempts to revisit his past and ââ¬Ëtries the door of where I used to liveââ¬â¢, but finds it ââ¬ËLockedââ¬â¢; the finality in the modifier symbolises how the speaker is unable to return to a past that no longer exists, and thus remains estranged from the familiarity of the past. Never Go Backââ¬â¢ develops on this idea further since it follows the journey of a speaker who revisits her old haunts after the end of her failed marriage. Death, here, is used as an extended metaphor, in contrast with Dockeryââ¬â¢s literal death, but this likewise establishes a period of mourning and self-reflection as she is being transported by ââ¬Ëa taxi implying a herseââ¬â¢. However, the persona suggests there is some consolation in life since she is ââ¬Ëreleasedââ¬â¢ by the past, the verb carrying connotations of the relief and freedom gained in knowing that the past no longer exists, whereas Larkinââ¬â¢s resignation towards life in sombre lines such as, ââ¬ËWhether or not we use it, it goesââ¬â¢, suggests Dockeryââ¬â¢s death to be more of a call to take stock of his life and thus suggests it to be the beginning of the end. ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢ invites us to the idea that death is a private experience but this sense of intimacy can be misleading as it opens with the simile ââ¬Ëclosed like confessionalsââ¬â¢. The sinister religious connotations suggest how the sudden belief in death has the ability to invoke regret as one realises the significance of their life; the narrator thus suggests that there is a need for secrecy at this personal revelation as he attributes the ambulance with a spectral quality by the dynamic verb ââ¬Ëthreadââ¬â¢, provoking images of the Moirae and their threads of fate, and thus constructing the image of the ââ¬Ëtrafficââ¬â¢ as being the fabricated flow of time. However, the persona reminds us that death is a definite reality as he eerily juxtaposes it against youthful innocence with ââ¬Ëchildren strewn on steps or roadsââ¬â¢. The verisimilitude of the ordinary urban scene also grants death a recognisable status, but at the same, Larkin demonstrates how death is inscrutable via the symbol of the ambulance: ââ¬Ëgiving back none of the glances they absorbââ¬â¢, presenting the ambulance, and therefore, death as a mystery which provides no answers. Similarly, ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ provides as an example of how death can be cryptic as the persona presents a gothic scene breathlessly. The irregularly long opening line coupled with the pathetic fallacy in ââ¬Ëbitter moonââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ësmudgy cloudsââ¬â¢ conveys the speaker's rambling tone and her disorganised state of mind as she appears to plan her own death. These imagined, celestial characters provide a parallel with her emotional reality through the repeated vowel and consonant sounds in ââ¬Ëgleamââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëgleeââ¬â¢, thus drawing attention to the sandwiched non-sequitur of ââ¬ËI dress in a shroud. The deliberate caesurae and the ending rhyme ââ¬Ëmeââ¬â¢ suggests she is preparing for and welcoming her death, a stark contrast with the ââ¬Ëambulancesââ¬â¢ which ââ¬Ëcome to rest at any kerbââ¬â¢ and are the intruders that disturb the normality of everyday life. The reassuring universality of life is also missing in ââ¬ËThe Su icideââ¬â¢, as the persona twists images of innocence such as with the modifier in ââ¬Ëthe horrid smiling mouthsââ¬â¢, and conveys her contempt, much like the case of betrayal by her loved one. Duffy thus attempts to establish a personal relationship with death which is arguably seen as unnatural, whereas Larkin suggests that it is perfectly acceptable for death to transcend life and for our understanding of it to remain little. Larkinââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢ continues its cool narration which helps create an ironic quality to the scene when the speaker suddenly launches into the description of death in the second stanza, all whilst sustaining the organised verse form. Life is seen to quickly dissolve into the image of the ââ¬Ëwild white face atop red stretcher blanketsââ¬â¢, the elongated effect of the alliteration serving as the only definite point of transition. Otherwise, the face isnââ¬â¢t given any attention as ââ¬Ëit is carried in and stowedââ¬â¢, the pronoun ââ¬Ëitââ¬â¢ dehumanising the person and the use of verbs which carry connotations of luggage also demonstrates how our bodies are only perceived as vessels for our souls, and that without them, we are powerless. The witnesses, ie the children and women, show to have realised this reality. The epiphany delivered slowly in ââ¬ËAnd sense the solving emptinessââ¬â¢ uses the present continuous to suggest that this experience is universal, but the delivery in gentle sibilance conveys the hushed voice of the speaker as he establishes the event as a quiet memento mori. The obscurity thus suggests the unwillingness of facing the realisation that everything is pointless in the face of death. This is further demonstrated by the polysyndetic listing of ââ¬Ëso blank and whole and trueââ¬â¢, each adjective stressed as the persona makes an effort to capture the moment of realisation before it is lost. Paradoxically, these fatalistic descriptions also carry a sense of nihilism and indifference as Larkin here chillingly injects realism into the scene when he remind us of how we lose our humanity in death. Power and identity are also recurring ideas in ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ as Duffyââ¬â¢s persona realises that death is a means of achieving recognition and establishing control when she feels trapped and isolated by life. This is denoted by the speaker declaring ââ¬Ëmy body is a blank page I will write onââ¬â¢; the modal verb ââ¬Ëwillââ¬â¢ and the monosyllabic lexis conveys the personaââ¬â¢s certain tone as she describes how her romantic notion of death will leave a clear message for the intended left behind. Similarly, Larkin also shows how death can leave revelations for those left behind, except Duffy here provides a specific example with the possessive determiner in ââ¬Ëmy bodyââ¬â¢. The use of the personal perspective conveys the speaker's isolation which is reiterated by the repeated syntactical structure of ââ¬ËNobodyââ¬â¢; this suggests her lack of recognition in life and how the preservation of it, ââ¬Ëeyes in the glass like squidsââ¬â¢, is deemed unnatural which is mirrored by the sardonic ââ¬ËSexyââ¬â¢ that summarises the simile. By comparison, both poets indicate that death is a natural state due to the futility in living except Larkin suggests that this is a sudden realisation whereas Duffy demonstrates how the drawn-out angst of death is felt on the condition of being alive. The outer enclosed rhymes that contains the intertwining rhymes in ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢, such as the passive-sounding ââ¬Ëairââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëthereââ¬â¢, captures Larkinââ¬â¢s conclusion of how death is the inevitable fate that overshadows our lives. The harsh sibilance in ââ¬Ëthe sudden shut of lossââ¬â¢ conveys the finality of the end but this ending remains dynamic, as the assonance invokes the sighing sound of the narrator as his summary of life, ââ¬Ëunique blend of families and fashionsââ¬â¢ is chased into the final verse where it is unravelled, the dynamism evoking the sense of continuity of time. The noun phrase ââ¬Ëexchange of loveââ¬â¢ denotes how life is a contractual obligation but is only temporary as the endgame is ââ¬Ëto lie unreachable inside a roomââ¬â¢ which connotes the undeniable loneliness in death. However, Larkin persists in remaining vague as he describes death with the euphemism ââ¬Ëwhat is left to comeââ¬â¢, thus establishing how death remains as an unspoken truth in society. Similarly, Duffy shows how the concept of death governs people in ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ where the personaââ¬â¢s increasingly vindictive mood culminates into unrepentantly spitting out imperatives to the readers: ââ¬ËFuck off. Worship. ââ¬â¢ The speaker here shows an awareness of the readersââ¬â¢ voyeurism who are compelled to follow her path to self-destruction and watch her play god as she ââ¬Ëlies under the lightbulbââ¬â¢, literally suggesting the exposure to truth and figuratively conveying a sensual submission to her ââ¬Ëlightbulbââ¬â¢ moment of self-inflicted death. However, we see the personaââ¬â¢s captivation is to the point of delusion. The dismissive tone and metaphor for life in ââ¬ËWho wants / a bloody valentine pumping its love hate love? offset by the deviantly collocated ââ¬Ëbloodyââ¬â¢ alongside the iambic dimeter, attributes the sound of two heartbeats to her confused valentineââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëlove hate loveââ¬â¢. Duffy thus suggests that reflecting over the fragility of life can drive a person to madness and, as Larkin suggests, there is a conservative view that promotes the secrecy of death, indicating how people fearfully deny death in their lives due to its ability to ex pose human frailty which may be seen as an uncomfortable consequence of death. Structurally, Duffy's haphazardly contained verses and the speaker's punning cliches such as ââ¬ËI take out the knivesââ¬â¢ create a more heartfelt cognisance of death as something looked for and desirable, whereas Larkinââ¬â¢s standardised verses convey his reliable but frigid outlook on the subject. ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢ indicates that death is a passive presence; the echoing alliteration in ââ¬Ëdulls to distance all we areââ¬â¢ and the collective pronoun ââ¬Ëweââ¬â¢ concluded that death is the unavoidable fate universal to all of us and, that in death, we are all equal. Likewise, ââ¬ËThe Suicideââ¬â¢ reflects how death can leave a resounding impact except, specifically, deathââ¬â¢s legacy can be a notoriety caused by the decision to unnaturally decide your own death, instead of letting it take you, as suggested in ââ¬ËAmbulancesââ¬â¢. The shocking irony in ââ¬ËThis will kill my folksââ¬â¢ thus suggests how death can become an act act of spite when we wilfully plot our own demise instead of allowing death to take its own course. Larkinââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ suggests there is a sense of tediousness in death rituals as the persona abruptly cuts off the Dean in the opening lines of the poem with a heavy caesura. Instead, he teases the readers with reminisces of ââ¬Ëour versionââ¬â¢ of the mischief he took part in with friends in the past. This emotional detachment from his old acquaintanceââ¬â¢s death is defended by the transitive modifier ââ¬Ëvisitantââ¬â¢, proposing his apathy is appropriate with the neologism ââ¬Ëdeath-suitedââ¬â¢. This avoidance of the death is further demonstrated by focusing on the comforting familiarity of the surroundings: ââ¬ËA known bell chimesââ¬â¢. However, this comfort remains unreachable, announced by the speaker with the modifier ââ¬ËLockedââ¬â¢ as he revisits his old halls of residence. The polysyndeton in ââ¬ËCanal and clouds and colleges subside slowly from viewââ¬â¢ support the adverb ââ¬Ëslowlyââ¬â¢ as Larkin illustrates this gradual passing of time and how the illusion can make one forget that life is limited, the persona thus showing how the event of death can provoke us to want to revisit the past. In ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢, the speaker similarly explores the relationship between time and death, except here, death is used as a metaphor to describe loss as time itself is personified ââ¬Ëleft pining till it diedââ¬â¢. Duffy thus suggests the human desire to enjoy more of life before death takes us, whereas Larkinââ¬â¢s numerical references to time ââ¬Ëââ¬â¢43ââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëtwenty-oneââ¬â¢ quantifies life and suggests a more practical view on the finiteness of time. The persona likewise revisits the past after the end of her marriage, as the narrative begins with the familiar scene of ââ¬Ëwhere the living dead drink all dayââ¬â¢, the oxymoron ââ¬Ëliving deadââ¬â¢ indicating how people live unfulfilled lives while the hard alliteration delivers a heavy droning sound that lends a mechanical quality to the scene. This conveys a sense of disillusionment with the social activities she used to enjoy, in contrast with ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢, where the speaker recalls the past with nostalgic reverence as he anecdotally reveals how Dockery used to share ââ¬Ërooms with Cartwright who was killedââ¬â¢. Both poets therefore demonstrate how death and loss can trigger retrospections of the past, Duffy arguing for the case of pain and abandonment in loss with the image of ââ¬Ëa limping dogââ¬â¢, whereas Larkin avoids such sentiments with the trailing ellipsis in ââ¬ËHow much . . How little . . . ââ¬â¢, the unfinished thoughts enacting Duffyââ¬â¢s convincing view on how the best emotional response to death is to ââ¬Ënever go back. ââ¬â¢ The persona in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ begins to show an awareness of how life is ultimately a journey towards the final destination of death. The train station used symbolically as ââ¬Ëthe joining and parting linesââ¬â¢ simil arly imply the different crossroads existing in life and how companionship allows our roads to briefly overlap. However, the antithesis of the nouns ââ¬Ënumbnessââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëshockââ¬â¢ suggests there is a sense of confusion when the speaker draws comparisons between Dockeryââ¬â¢s accomplishments and his own, and ponders on the moment he strayed ââ¬Ëwidely from the othersââ¬â¢. Therefore, the syndetic list of repeated negatives ââ¬Ëno son, no wife, no house or landââ¬â¢ should depict the speakerââ¬â¢s failure of attaining any adult achievement, yet the nonchalance in ââ¬Ëstill seemed quite naturalââ¬â¢ suggests that Larkin hadn't quite moved on from his time in university, the adverb ââ¬Ëstillââ¬â¢ indicating the speaker's struggle to come to terms with ageing and the flow of time. There is thus a sense of dread when Larkin contemplates the ââ¬Ëstrong unhindered moonââ¬â¢; the pathetic fallacy suggests the feebleness in differentiating our individual lifelines since we are all doomed to the ââ¬Ëonly end of ageââ¬â¢, the adverb ââ¬Ëonlyââ¬â¢ stressing the absoluteness and lack of choice in death. Duffyââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢ also demonstrates an emotional resignation to the choices made as ââ¬Ëthe houseââ¬â¢, which personifies the past, ââ¬Ëprefers to be left aloneââ¬â¢ amidst the overwhelming images of death; the verb ââ¬Ëprefersââ¬â¢ suggests it has no intention of recovering from the metaphorical ââ¬Ëcancerââ¬â¢ which spoils the glowing memory of it being ââ¬Ëwhere you were one of the bridesââ¬â¢. The house instead reprimands the persona with ââ¬ËYou shouldn't be hereââ¬â¢, the negative modal verb ââ¬Ëshouldn'tââ¬â¢ warning against the attempt to reconcile with the past. The speaker is thus unable to bitterly ruminate the past and abstains from comparing her life to others, ie her ex-husband, alternatively, allowing ââ¬Ëobjectsââ¬â¢ (which pertain to the past) to symbolise life itself, and demonstrates how they can symbolically ââ¬Ëfill a room with painââ¬â¢ after the end of their use. This passiveness of the persona is also missing in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢, where Larkin intentionally uses Dockeryââ¬â¢s death as a means to appraise the value of his own life. Rather, the use of the second person narrative in ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢ becomes increasingly significant as the speaker captures the suffocating quality of death, recreating the past through syntactic parallelism in ââ¬Ëall the lies . . . and all the criesââ¬â¢, and the soft assonance in the pictorial image of ââ¬Ëdraw your loved body in blurred airââ¬â¢ conveying this ghostly effect as Duffy places the readers in closer proximity to death. Comparatively using the first person perspective, the speaker in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ is more prone to deviate from Dockery's unfortunate death and instead focuses on the bleakness of the mundane: ââ¬ËAnd ate an awful pieââ¬â¢. Therefore, both poets present life as a journey that is met with death, yet Larkin demonstrates how death can be used comparatively when we realise our own expiration date and consider the wider meaning of our lives, whereas Duffy indicates how grief can distort the past and how this can, in effect, emotionally paralyse a person. ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ begins with a simplistic but regular alternating rhyme scheme which suits Larkinââ¬â¢s familiarity with his alma mater. The steady fall of sounds such as ââ¬Ëgiveââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëliveââ¬â¢ capture the personaââ¬â¢s feelings of bittersweet nostalgia but this gradually evolves until the final syntactical structure of ABBCADDC, which creates the suitably dense texture demanded, as Larkin moves from describing his literal surroundings to attributing philosophical thoughts to deathââ¬â¢s rendition of life. The speaker derogatorily muses that our acquisitions aren't as valuable as society's ââ¬Ëinnate assumptionsââ¬â¢ perceive them to be, since they are superficially denounced as a ââ¬Ëstyleââ¬â¢ that tragically ââ¬Ëharden into all weââ¬â¢ve gotââ¬â¢. There is thus a sense of futility in life inspired by the news of a young manââ¬â¢s death, as Larkin concludes that even our choices are obscurely decided by ââ¬Ësomething hidden from us choseââ¬â¢, the vague pronoun ââ¬Ësomethingââ¬â¢ suggesting how the workings of life is beyond our comprehension while death remains a certainty that levels everyone in due time. ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢ similarly concludes with the idea that life is governed by a mysterious entity, except here, it is explicitly denoted as greed and human desire. The crude images of the ââ¬Ësly sums of moneyââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëa drenched whoreââ¬â¢ connote a sense of the decay and degression found in societyââ¬â¢s apparent hedonism. This enables death to run in parallel with life, as even the associated taxi driver is described by the cliche ââ¬Ëlooks like deathââ¬â¢. Ironically, the speaker demonstrates how this illusion of life, and its false evolution, allows possibilities to remain open; the hollow sounds in the pronoun ââ¬Ënowhereââ¬â¢ and neologism ââ¬Ënowhenââ¬â¢ dissolves the significance of time and space, and instead grants importance to the present by the homely image of ââ¬Ëthe fires and lights come on wherever you liveââ¬â¢. By comparison, Larkin suggests a sense of entrapment by the facade as ââ¬Ëwhat we think truest . . . warp tight-shutââ¬â¢; the harsh syllables in the modifier ââ¬Ëtight-shutââ¬â¢ elicit a sense of urgency as the speaker realises he is running out of time to achieve what he wishes, yet the possibilities remain cut off in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ due to the speakerââ¬â¢s acute awareness of death. In conclusion, Larkin and Duffy both demonstrate the omnipresence of death in our lives. Larkin uses his unassuming observations to describe death as an inescapable component of everyday life, thus suggesting that his point of enlightenment in ââ¬ËDockery and Sonââ¬â¢ marks too as a pessimistic beginning of the end. Duffy chooses to manifest death in everyday components of life, normalising death, and instead, offers the view in ââ¬ËNever Go Backââ¬â¢ that death provides a chance to understand that the past is gone, and also as a catalyst for hopeful beginnings. However, despite these contrarian views, both poets agree that death remains the undeniable ending to our lives
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