Monday, February 18, 2013

Final Draft of My Poetry Analysis


Alicia Rogers
Wexler
English 495
11 February 2013
Partial Draft
Comfort and Adventure in Death:
A Look at Tennyson’s “Crossing the Bar”
            It is often said that the only inescapable constants of life are death and taxes.  As mortal men and women, we will always be tied to some form of government to control the masses, and thus, subject to the payment of taxes.  Furthermore, as mortal men and women, we will always be tied to the grave.  Mortality is something that we all share; it is our great equalizer and unifier.  However, none of this makes death any easier to encounter.  This is where art comes in.  Whether graphic or literary, art seeks to negotiate the boundary between life and death and lend some comfort or insight into an experience that we all must face.  Alfred, Lord Tennyson navigates through his own feelings about death in his poem, “Crossing the Bar.”  Through his natural images, his structure and rhyme, and his established conceit, Tennyson finds a place of comfort and acceptance within the deep distress of morbid thought.  
When Tennyson discusses natural images within his poems, he connects back to stability.  The images serve as reminders that humanity, in general, and the reader, specifically, are connected to the world.  In “Crossing the Bar,” Tennyson relies on images of the environment to “gravitate [the poem] towards some inevitable ground” (Tucker 9).  The poem opens with the “sunset and the evening star” which are simple twilight images that people encounter daily, yet their significance intensifies throughout the poem (Tennyson 63).  Just as humanity cannot stop the sun from setting nor the stars from heralding the night, we cannot stop death from coming for us.  It is the way that things were meant to be.  Furthermore, these images are not drawn in fearful colors.  Instead, they are displayed in their simplicity, as facts.  In the next stanza, readers witness the quiet peace of the tide in the sea.  This ocean is “too full for sound or foam” which reflects an air of calmness; there is no tumult here.  The image of the tide also brings implications of being swept away in its midst.  However, the boat that is the narrator uses the tide in order to journey.  This sets the narrator up as “is the tide master, not its victim” (Shaw 10).  Yet, Tennyson also uses this inevitability that the natural world invokes to unite with the power of God.  As the “flood may bear [him] far” to see his Pilot, the narrator recognizes that he is held up by forces beyond himself.  Just as readers cannot escape the world around them, neither can they escape the power of God and death. 
The structure and the rhyme scheme of the poem further emphasize Tennyson’s journey to a peaceful resolution with death.  Just as Tennyson uses the natural world to reflect the inescapability of death, he finds “a semblance of command…reflected in the command of poetic form” (Tucker 14).  Tennyson takes an uncontrollable situation and exerts control over it by fitting the wildness of death into four finely structured and relatable stanzas.  Tennyson uses a simple abab rhyme scheme to further resonate the straightforward goal of the poem and, ultimately, the plainness of the subject matter.  The word choice also echoes this need for simplicity.  Instead of dressing the lines up with cluttered adjectives, Tennyson lets the smallest word count.  The poem is not overly ornate; in fact, it is “poetry of the austere and minimal” (Shaw 9).  This reflects Tennyson’s understanding that death is not an exceptional experience.  It is one that all beings who live must face.   Yet, even within the “deliberately impoverished” style, readers—like Tennyson—learn that it is not desirable to avoid death at all cost.  Tennyson’s “short syntactic units create a sense of urgency” that leads readers to believe that Tennyson looks forward to the journey of death (Shaw 10).  Tennyson even uses the cleanest method of signaling closure with repetition and revision. In his “twice repeated optative—‘may there be no moaning,’ ‘may there be no sadness’—and the final ‘hope’” Tennyson draws his poem to its natural conclusion and its death (Shaw 11).  This continual mirroring of his subject matter leads readers towards Tennyson’s own conclusion that death is not big enough to fear, instead it is another normal step in the process of life. 
Finally, Tennyson treats readers to an extended metaphor that eases both their feelings about death and his own feelings about death.  The narrator of the poem is a boat heading to sea.  This motif of the sea and the boat “permits plenty of action, but action in which the actors are subordinated to some authority outside of themselves” (Tucker 11).  Just as the boat cannot journey without the sea, humanity cannot journey without additional authority.  The “sustained evocation of emotional atmosphere” holds readers to Tennyson’s analysis and urges them to further contemplate the nature of death (Tucker 12).  Additionally, Tennyson creates another metaphor that complements the first.  He uses a natural sandbar to signify the edge of life and the beginning of death.  This bar is the obstacle that must be faced in order to see his “Pilot face to face” (Tennyson 64).  Ultimately, Tennyson finds hope in the journey that his boat must make. He puts his trust in his faith where “God is the guide as well as the goal, for without His Incarnation as the ‘Pilot’ at the outset of the voyage there would be no immortality on the farther shore” (Shaw 10).  Tennyson does not undercut the overarching message that death is unavoidable; instead, he call attention to his confidence that “though he knows he will not make the journey through his own navigating skills” he has hope that he has run the course back to his mooring where he can “trust in his Pilot’s presence” (Shaw 10).  Readers who have followed the poem closely can see that the narrator does not end in turmoil—he may be unsure of the journey, but he knows that it is a natural course; furthermore, he remains ever hopeful. 
In my own life, I have often pondered the relationship between life and death.  I became acquainted with the topic at a very young age.  One of my younger sisters died in her infancy when I was five years old.  More recently, my younger brother died in a snowstorm.  As such, I’ve had years to contemplate and reexamine the subject.  I, like Tennyson, cannot bring myself to fear death.  Instead, I view it as part of the deal we all make when we are born.  It may be a little morbid to think about, but we are all marching at different speeds toward the same end.  All that humans can do is seek for something that makes that march worthwhile—be it God, or Love, or Learning.  
Works Cited
Shaw, W. David. “Tennyson’s Late Elegies.” Victorian Poetry 12.1 (1974): 1-12. JSTOR. Web.
8 Feb. 2013.
Tennyson, Alfred. “Crossing the Bar.” 100 Best-Loved Poems. Ed. Philip Smith. NY: Dover
Publications, 1995. 63-64. Print.
Tucker, Herbert F., Jr. “Tennyson and the Measure of Doom.” PMLA 98.1 (Jan. 1983): 8-20.
JSTOR. Web. 8 Feb. 2013.

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