An Arundel Tomb. Philip Larkin wrote this poem in 1956 after a visit to Chichester Cathedral. The monument is of an earl and countess of Arundel.

Similar documents
Funeral Blues. Róisin, Nicole and Aoife G

By T. S. Eliot, Written and Published in 1925

Instant Words Group 1

somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond e.e.cummings

Jane Weir is a textile designer as well as a poet. See if you can find and underline the references to textiles/material or clothing in the poem.

OZYMANDIUS by Percy Bysshe Shelley (1817)

Short, humorous poems Made in 18 th century (1700s) Takes its name from a country in Ireland that was featured in an old song, Oh Will You Come Up to

Students will be able to understand the differences between tone and mood, and be able to identify each within a piece of writing.

COLLEGE GUILD POETRY CLUB-2, UNIT 4 SPANISH SPEAKING POETS

STANZAS FOR COMPREHENSION/ Extract Based Extra Questions Read the following extracts and answer the questions that follow in one or two lines.

Hearts and Hands By O. Henry 1902

UNSEEN POETRY. Secondary 3 Literature 2016

Cite. Infer. to determine the meaning of something by applying background knowledge to evidence found in a text.

Reading Classwork & Homwwork

Putting It All Together Theme and Point of View Using Ozymandias Foundation Lesson

Selection Review #1. A Dime a Dozen. The Dream

Date: Wednesday, 8 October :00AM

Poetic Devices and Terms to Know

THE PHANTOM'S SONG. Written by. Gaston Leroux

Book Projects. Choose one of the following along with a summary of your book:

English I International Scholars Summer Reading

I Shall Not Pass This Way Again

Chapter One The night is so cold as we run down the dark alley. I will never, never, never again take a bus to a funeral. A funeral that s out of town

Lesson 3: The Pearl. Getting Started

Look at the pictures. Can you guess what the topic idiom is about?

Sample Pages. Not for sale or distribution

You flew out? Are you trying to make a fool of me?! said Miller surprised and rising his eyebrows. I swear to God, it wasn t my intention.

English 521 Activity. Mending Wall Robert Frost

Poet s Tools. A poet s tools are: 1. Word Choice 2. Imagery 3. Sound Devices 4. Formal Devices (Structure and Rhythm)

Medieval Art. artwork during such time. The ivory sculpting and carving have been very famous because of the

Vigil (1991) for violin and piano analysis and commentary by Carson P. Cooman

Calderside Academy. Poetry Unit

Cornell Notes Topic/ Objective: Name:

What are the common aesthetic elements used by the director? How are the audience positioned and why? How would you describe the look of the film?

William Shakespeare "The Bard"

Phonology Unit ١٣ Phonemic symbol review A- Transcribe the following sentences : a. / t / b. / / c. / / d. / / e. / / f. / / g. / / h.

Complete ISN: Objective(s): I can TPCASTT a new poem and look For leadership characteristics. Purpose: To explain & analyze poems.

Peter Hoffman. Com 372 Literature to Film. 5 April Paper 3: The Lottery. Professor McCarney

Don t Think Don t think of the roses on the trellis overhead you motoring through, captain of your tricycle. Don t think of the birdbath either where

TONE. Tone is the AUTHOR S attitude towards the audience, the subject, or the character.

Literary Terms Project

Topic the main idea of a presentation

SONNET 116 AND THE MANHUNT LINKS

3/8/2016 Reading Review. Name: Class: Date: 1/12

The Development of Museums

Name. Vocabulary. incentive horizons recreation unfettered. Finish each sentence using the vocabulary word provided.

Spelling. Be ready for SATs. Countdown to success. City Wide Learning Body SHEFFIELD. Hints and tips

Language & Literature Comparative Commentary

How to read a poem. Verse 1

The Effect of Allusions

The road not taken robert frost figurative meaning. The road not taken robert frost figurative meaning.zip

Remember is composed in the form known as the Italian or Petrarchan sonnet, rhymed abba abba cdd ece, traditionally associated with love poetry.

Appendix 1: Some of my songs. A portrayal of how music can accompany difficult text. (With YouTube links where possible)

EXTRACT FROM THREE SISTERS - Chekhov

Fireflies in the Garden

Anne Bradstreet and the Private Voice English 2327: American Literature I D. Glen Smith, instructor

I am looking forward to your August arrival! In the meantime, please enjoy your summer break AND your summer reading.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird by Wallace Stevens

6th Grade Reading: 3rd 6-Weeks Common Assessment Review. Name: Period: Date:

14. The extended metaphor of stanzas 1 4 compares love to A. an unwilling dieter B. an illness C. an unruly child D. a prisoner in jail E.

The Scar Audio Commentary Transcript Film 2 The Mouth of the Shark

April... Spring song characters Gus Octavia... Dec Tick Tock Father Time Summer song characters...

English I Reading. Connecting Selections Scoring Guide April 2013

Y6 Literature Revision Worksheet

Analysing Mother, Any Distance by Simon Armitage

Reading Assessment Vocabulary Grades 6-HS

The Ruined Maid. By Thomas Hardy

Emily Dickinson's Poetry Emily Dickinson ( )

Муниципальный тур Всероссийской олимпиады учебный год Английский язык 7-8 классы. LISTENING Time: 15 min CONVERSATION

Who is the happy Warrior? Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be?

Moby Dick. By Herman Melville. Chapter 19: The Prophet

The City Planners by Margaret Atwood. Zildjian Robinson & Heyden Nunn

Selection Review #1. Keeping the Night Watch. Pages 1-20

The First Hundred Instant Sight Words. Words 1-25 Words Words Words

ETIENNE HOUVET PHOTO COLLECTION OF CHARTRES CATHEDRAL EARLY 20 th CENTURY, TEXT BY YVES DELAPORTE

Incoming 9 th Grade Pre-IB English

Close Reading of Poetry

Lesson 3: The Pearl. Getting Started

The Writing Process. Biotech English 10 Spring 2011

My Grandmother s Love Letters

Caryl: Lynn, darling! (She embraces Lynn rather showily) It s so wonderful to see you again!

LIFE DIES, AND THEN YOU SUCK. A One Act Stage Play. Steven G. Jackson. Copyright 2017 by Steven G. Jackson

An "elegy" is a lament for the dead. A "little elegy" could mean a short

This will count as a major assessment (test) grade, so be sure to put forth your best effort on this!

Children s literature

Elements of Fiction. Characterization

HOW TO WRITE A LITERARY COMMENTARY

beliefs. Cian Hogan

"Well, Mr. Easton, if you will make me speak first, I suppose I must. Don't you ever recognize old friends when you meet them in the West?

Writing Critical Analysis Essays. Dual Enrollment English Courses

OLD FLAME. Eléonore Guislin

Romeo & Juliet ACT 4. Revision Recap

KAJA LEIJON PORTFOLIO 2016

World Studies (English II) 2017 Summer Reading Assignment Text: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. Student Name: Date: Grade: /100

LITERARY LOG ASSIGNMENT

A Veil of Water By Amy Boesky

Many authors, including Mark Twain, utilize humor as a way to comment on contemporary culture.

Lesson 24 Comparing poems

1. Close reading 101: try with passage from BNW 2. Focus on chapters TPCASTT one tool for analyzing poetry 4. TPCASTT Ode to Science 5.

Guided Notes 11: An Age of Empires

Transcription:

An Arundel Tomb Background Philip Larkin wrote this poem in 1956 after a visit to Chichester Cathedral. The monument is of an earl and countess of Arundel. The joined hands of the couple were actually a later addition by a 19 th century sculptor who was making repairs to the tomb which had been badly damaged during the Reformation and the Civil War. Before he began to repair them the earl had no arms and the countess' right hand was missing. They weren't even lying together but were on separate tombs. When Larkin found out, he was amused by the historical inaccuracies of his poem. This poem, published in 'The Whitsun Weddings' in 1964, was one of three read at Larkin's funeral service in Westminster Abbey. A copy of the poem is now placed at the base of the tomb for visitors to read. Summary The earl and the countess are lying together, carved in stone. They are side by side, their facial features difficult to pick out clearly as they have been eroded over the centuries. They are wearing clothes which are appropriate to their status but they too are difficult to see clearly now. He is wearing a suit of armour, jointed at the places where it meets the body's joints, she is wearing a pleated dress: the pleats are stiff because they are made of stone And there is a hint of something ridiculous The little dogs at their feet.

Note: When Larkin sees the tomb first, he is unimpressed. It is blurred and unclear and nothing about its plainness attracts his notice particularly. It seems a typical mediaeval monument, stiff and dull. When he notices the little dogs at their feet, he thinks them slightly silly; he is definitely not moved or in any way drawn to the couple on the tomb.... The tomb is plain (Baroque was a more ornate style of art and architecture that flourished from about 1550 to 1750 this tomb was before that time) Nothing about it seems to catch the eye or interest the poet particularly until He notices the earl's left hand gauntlet, (long glove from a suit of armour) it is still Together with the other glove in the earl's hand but it it empty, his hand is not in it, and One sees, with a sense of surprise and sharp tenderness His hand is withdrawn from the gauntlet and is holding his wife's hand Note: When the poet suddenly notices the earl's hand withdrawn from his gauntlet and holding his wife's hand, he is struck by the gesture and is extremely moved. Now his attention begins to focus on the couple. His interest has been piqued and he is not as detached as he was in the first stanza.... The couple would not have imagined they would lie together for so long Such faithfulness, commemorated in a stone monument

Was something one would only have expected their friends to notice about them The sculptor probably decided to add the hand holding himself, without being told to It was just a casual decision to add that touch, he was really commissioned to record Their names in Latin around the base of the tomb. Note: The couple would hardly have imagined that this was how they would be remembered or that this gesture would be the only thing visitors would particularly notice. The idea of the tomb was to record their names for posterity as they were important people in their time.... The couple would not have imagined how soon In their journey through time, as they lay on their backs, motionless in stone The air would silently begin to erode their features on the tomb The old feudal system would vanish The many visitors, one group succeeding, or taking over from the last, would begin To look at their inscription but not be able to read it because it was in Latin, and instead they would only look at the couple holding hands. Stiffly cast in stone, unmoving, they Note: They could not have imagined how times would change, that the feudal system would pass away and that visitors to the tomb would only look at them with mild interest; they would not be able to read or understand the Latin inscription around the base of the tomb. The couple remain unchanged, however. Cast in stone, they lie together....

Persisted, joined together through centuries Snow fell, winter after countless winter. Sunlight Filled the stained glass windows every summer, a cheerful Sound of birdsong filled the air above The graveyard, filled with bones, the graveyard never changed. And up the paths Came visitors, differently dressed according to the fashions of the times. Note: The couple's monument survived the passing of centuries. Seasons came and went, visitors in the different fashions of the last several hundred years came to the cathedral. The only thing apart from themselves that remained unchanged was the graveyard.... The visitors somehow eroded the identity of the couple (perhaps literally by physically touching the monument or figuratively by not understanding the Latin and not knowing who the couple were) Now, they lie powerless in an age they would probably regard as shallow It is an age where knights in armour no longer exist, All that remains of their age is a memory, as unsubstantial as coils of smoke Hanging above their monument which is a tiny piece of that bygone age All that is left is them lying in that 'attitude' or posed position.

Note: The times have changed so much that the couple would not relate to anything about modern day England. All the values they held dear are gone forever. The image of the coils of smoke above the tomb has two possible meanings, it could refer to the memories of their time, which are as insubstantial as wisps of smoke now, or it could refer to the values of this modern age, which are shallow and worthless and as vague as coils of smoke above the tomb.... The passage of time had changed them into Something they probably never wanted to be. The image of them lying together, hands clasped in faithful love Has become what they are known for Their coat of arms has faded from the armour; this gesture is what they are known for now And we like it because we believe it proves Our theory that love survives, even if that is a flawed belief The only thing that will survive when we die is love. Note: This is the most controversial stanza in the poem. Critics differ on whether the poem ends on a note of hope or of pessimism. Larkin may be saying that love will survive, that it will last beyond death or he may be saying, by his references to 'almost' that this is what we'd like to believe, but it's not true. I feel the second explanation is probably correct. Does the couple's love survive because a sculptor, on a whim, joined their hands together? We might like to think so, but Larkin doubts it. The idea of love survives; we want to believe it is the most important thing about us but is it just an 'attitude', like the couple's pose? Larkin was certainly moved when he saw the joined hands, his initial reaction was one of tender surprise but on deeper reflection, he seems to be saying that he fell into the same trap as all of us; the romantic side of him wanted to believe the gesture was intentional and that it symbolised eternal, undying love. His comment that the couple would hardly have wanted to be remembered that way and that the pose was probably chosen without their knowledge proves he doesn't really believe the monument is a testimony to everlasting love.

Theme There are several themes in this poem, the most important are the enduring nature of love and the passing of time. Love: Whether or not Larkin fully agrees with the notion that love survives after we are long gone, he does acknowledge that this is the message modern visitors get from seeing the couple on the tomb holding hands. Time: Time changes so many things; nothing about today's society would be recognisable to the mediaeval couple. The theme of time is bound up with the theme of love, which is the only thing that has not changed. Tone Like all of Larkin's poems on the course, the tone is detached at the start. He describes the tombs but without any particular feeling apart from a fleeting reference to the absurdity of the little dogs. Then when he notices their clasped hands, the poet becomes more emotionally involved with the couple, he feels tenderness and surprise. The ending may be seen as optimistic or as an ironic view of our longing for everlasting love. Imagery The poem contains images of love, of life and death all intertwined. Look at the fifth stanza, the poet gives us the beautiful image of the birdsong filling the air but then says they are singing in the graveyard. This juxtaposition (positioning side by side) of the two seemingly unconnected images is powerful; Larkin is reminding us of the realities of life. He never allows himself to become completely swept up in the idea of perfect, everlasting love and happiness in this poem.

The metaphor comparing time to a 'voyage' in the fourth stanza is particularly effective, it gives us an impression of the couple travelling through time together and makes us imagine them in 20 th century England and wonder what they would think of it. Love isn t stronger than death just because statues hold hands for 600 years.' Philip Larkin