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Dover Beach A Poem By: Matthew Arnold Dover Beach A Poem By: Matthew Arnold

Dover Beach A Poem By: Matthew Arnold - PowerPoint Presentation

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Dover Beach A Poem By: Matthew Arnold - PPT Presentation

Dover Beach A Poem By Matthew Arnold PowerPoint By Nicholas Giurleo Poet Biography Matthew Arnold Date and Place of Birth December 24 1822 in Laleham England Eldest son of Thomas Arnold and Mary Penrose Arnold his ID: 773989

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Dover BeachA Poem By: Matthew Arnold PowerPoint By: Nicholas Giurleo

Poet Biography: Matthew Arnold Date and Place of Birth: December 24, 1822 in Laleham, England Eldest son of Thomas Arnold and Mary (Penrose) Arnold; his father was a historian and the Headmaster of Rugby School located in Rugby, EnglandReceived an education at Winchester College , Rugby School, Balliol College and Oxford University 1828 : his family moved from Laleham to Rugby when Thomas Arnold received a job as headmaster at Rugby 1831: he was sent back to Laleham to be under the care of his uncle John Buckland at his preparatory school; he returned home and was tutored along with his younger brother Tom

1838-1842:Matthew and his brother produced a magazine twice yearly called the “Fox How Magazine”; poetry from Mathew was featured frequentlyAlso at this time Matthew received his secondary education at Winchester, Rugby, and Balliol College; he received many awards for poems he wrote such as “Alaric at Rome” and “Cromwell”1842: his father unexpectedly died1843:graduated from Oxford with 2nd Class Honors in “Greats” (a completion of the classics course) The years after his graduation he spent much of his time teaching at Rugby and traveling through Europe (i.e. Wales, Ireland, and France) after he received a fellowship (a funding for additional educational endeavors) by Oriel College Poet Biography: Matthew Arnold (Cont.)

Poet Biography: Matthew Arnold (Cont.)1847: granted the position of secretary by a lord named Lansdowne who personally knew Arnold’s father; Lansdowne was a very generous employer to Arnold and gave him many holidays which Arnold spent traveling the European continent1849 : anonymously published his first poetry book, The Strayed Reveller and Other Poems 1851: with the recommendation of Lansdowne, he was promoted to inspector of the schools of London by the crown (Queen Victoria); he remained in this position for 35 years Shortly after securing this financially beneficial position he married Fanny Lucy (Flu) Wightman; she was the daughter of a judge; she bore Arnold six children; three died in early childhood

Poet Biography: Matthew Arnold (Cont.)During the later part of his life Arnold began to devote more attention to social and theological subjects; such works included his Last Essays on Church and Religion and the Church of England ; Arnold was a devout Christian who concluded in his writings that Christianity would survive because the teachings of Christ addressed issues central to the moral existence of mankind 1883 : receives a substantial pension from Prime Minister Gladstone After receiving this pension he took two lecture tours through the United States; these lectures were published later as his Discourses in America1888: he died suddenly while walking with his wife to catch a tram (a trolley) in Liverpool to meet his daughter who was arriving by boat from the United States

Inspiration for Writing Dover BeachSome events Arnold lived through (roughly 1822-88):1819—Queen Victoria is born1829— Catholic Emancipation, ends most restrictions on Catholic civil rights, property ownership, & public service . 1834—Slavery banned in British colonies.1844—Irish potato famine begins . 1848—Marx and Engels, Communist Manifesto. 1851—First telegraph cable laid across the English Channel1853–56—Crimean War 1858— Government of India transferred to the Crown . 1859— Darwin’s   Origin of the Species . 1868—Disraeli becomes Prime Minister1879—Edison invents the electric light bulb1901—Death of Queen Victoria at age 82 Following his honeymoon with his wife, Arnold and his wife visited Dover, Kent, England, and he had the inspiration to write this poem after spending time on the coastal beach with his wife through the admiring of the view of the Strait of Dover…

SpeakerA male individual on a beach near Dover, England (almost certainly Matthew Arnold)

Audience A female individual on the beach listening to the speaker; the speaker loves this individual (almost certainly Arnold’s wife Fanny)

PurposeTo emphasize the message that challenges to the validity of long-standing theological and moral beliefs has harmed society’s faith in religion

Poem TypeThis poem is free verse because it has no defined structure (i.e. no consistent rhyme scheme) and the ideas of the poem are broken up into sentences.

Literal MeaningFirst Sentence: (lines 1)The sea is calm to-night . Second Sentence : (lines 2-5)The tide is full, the moon lies fairUpon the straits; -on the French coast the lightGleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand, Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay. Third Sentence : (line 6) Come to the window, sweet is the night-air! Fourth Sentence : (lines 7-14) Only, from the long line of spray Where the sea meets the moon- blanch’d land, Listen! you hear the grating roar Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling, At their return, up the high strand, Begin, and cease, and then again begin,With tremulous cadence slow, and bringThe eternal note of sadness in.1. Tonight the sea is calm.2. It is full tide, and the water reflects the image of the moon. The enormous cliffs of England, like the French coast glimmer brightly. 3. Come to the window. The night air is sweet. 4. Where the ocean meets the land whitened by the light of the moon you can hear the roar of pebbles which the waves take into sea and throw back to the land. Again and again this happens in almost a rhythmic way. It is quite saddening.

Literal Meaning (cont.)Fifth Sentence: (lines 15-20)Sophocles long ago Heard it on the Aegean , and it broughtInto his mind the turbid ebb and flowOf human misery; we Find also in the sound a thought, Hearing it by this distant northern sea. Sixth Sentence: (lines 20-22)The Sea of Faith Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furl’d. 5. I hear now the sound of sadness that the ancient Greek dramatist Sophocles once heard on the Aegean Sea. Like Sophocles I too hear a thought from the sea that greatly disturbs me. 6. Religion (Christianity) was once wrapped around the world much like how a girdle surrounds a person’s waste.

Literal Meaning (cont.)Seventh Sentence: (lines 23-27)But now I only hear Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar, Retreating, to the breathOf the night-wind, down the vast edges drear And naked shingles of the world .Eighth Sentence : (lines 27-34)Ah, love, let us be true To one another! for the world, which seems To lie before us like a land of dreams, So various, so beautiful, so new, Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light, Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain; And we are here as on a darkling plain Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight, Where ignorant armies clash by night. 7. Now I only hear the sad withdrawing roar of the night wind that blows down the vast and dull gloomy edges of the world 8. But love, let us be honest to each other. The world appears to be a land of beautiful and new dreams, however in reality it is not. There is no love, no peace, no joy, no light, and no compassion. Here we are on a dark beach confused and lost because around us the battle between the ignorant forces of religion and science fights on.

Figurative Language

SimileExample: (lines 20-22)…The Sea of FaithWas once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furl’d.Sea of Faith (symbolic for religion) girdle = surrounds/encircles Emphasis on symbolizing religion

MetaphorExample: (line 20)…The Sea of FaithFaith Sea = flood/inundate Emphasis on symbolizing religion

SymbolExample: (line 1)The Sea = religion (Christianity)Example: (line 8)Land = science The poem is an allegory for the battle at the time between religious conformity of the past and scientific and rationalist thought promoted by industrialization and the Victorian Era

HyperboleExample: (line 14)The eternal note of sadnessCalling sadness an eternal note is an extreme exaggerationEmphasizes the speaker’s sadness for observing what he believes is a symbolic representation of the battle between science and religion

Allusion Example: (lines 15-18)Sophocles long agoHeard it on the Aegean, and it broughtInto his mind the turbid ebb and flow Of human misery These lines allude to a passage in the ancient Greek play Antigone, by Sophocles. The eternal note of sadness also is a reference to a line from this play. Arnold is possibly referencing that Sophocles also experienced a sensation of revelation similar to the one Arnold experienced on the beach of Dover

Metonymy Example: (line 15)Sophocles = tragedy Sophocles was essentially the inventor of the play type of tragedy because he was one of the first documented humans to ever write a piece in this type

PersonificationExample: (lines 8-9)…[the] roar Of pebblesPebbles cannot roar; roaring is a human traitSensory detail that can also be interpreted as metaphoric for science making increasing noise and becoming more apparent to religious conformists throughout the changing world

Synecdoche, Euphemism, and ApostropheNot present in this poem

Sound Devices

AssonanceExample: (line 2)The tide is full, the moon lies fairSensory detail that metaphorically represents the security of religion prior to the emergence of new scientific and rational thought

ConsonanceExample: (line 33)Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight Adds to the sudden change in intensity at the end of the poem which metaphorically represents the panic organized religion was facing by the suddenly emergence of developing scientific thought

DissonanceExamples: (line 34)Ignorant clash(hard “g” sound) (hard “k” sound)Adds to the sudden change in intensity at the end of the poem which metaphorically represents the panic organized religion was facing by the suddenly emergence of new scientific developments

AlliterationExample: (lines 1-2)The sea is calm to-night.The tide is full, the moon lies f air Sensory detail that adds to the metaphorical representation of the security of religion before the emergence of new rational scientific thought

RepetitionExample: (lines 1-2, 4)The sea is calm to-night.The tide is full, the moon lies fair Upon the straits; -on the French coast the light Gleams and is gone… The use of this repeated verb helps to illustrate the scenery; more sensory detail to add to the metaphorical representation of the security of religion before the emergence of new rational scientific thought

Internal RhymeExample: (line 12)Begin, and cease, and then again begin,Begin , again , and begin rhyme and are all located in one single line of the poemEmphasizes metaphorically the back and forth struggle between religion and science

Onomatopoeia Example: (line 9) roarThe word roar sounds like what it actually representsPersonifies the pebbles from line 10

Rhyme SchemeNot present in this poem

Fin.Thanks for Watching! Thanks for Watching! Next Slide is Bibliography

Bibliography