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For Sidney Bechet
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEOee
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What is the poem about?
• Larkin writes about the Jazz composer Sidney Bechet who he was a big fan of. • In the poem New Orleans (birth place of jazz) is described, filled with happy people and music. • There is a positive reflection of memories, reminded by music, about love and happy times.
The Structure
• Larkin makes the poem
have a jazz beat, and the rhyme
scheme and stanza scheme is
unusual and unexpected like a
jazz song.
• The poem is an apostrophe
because Larkin talks to
someone as though they were
present.
The First Stanza
• In the first stanza the
music is described with the ‘shakes
like New Orleans reflect in the water’.
This simile is split over two lines,
the word ‘shakes’ put at the
end to ripple onto the next line. There
is a theme of water in this stanza.
• The poem is set up as a cause
and effect, how the music causes
people to imagine different places.
The Second Stanza
• The first scenario of love and beauty is described in the second stanza. • ‘Balconies, flower-baskets and quadrilles’ are romantic and pretty features. A quadrille is a square dance for couples. • Everyone is ‘making love’ and ‘going shares’ which means taking it easy. This is a calm, relaxed and fun atmosphere.
The Third Stanza
• The third stanza is about
the darker side of New Orleans.
‘Storyville’ is the red-light district.
• Larkin describes the ‘sporting-house girls’ (prostitutes)
as ‘like circus tigers’. Larkin places women in
a negative, degrading view that’s quite sexist. He
compares the ‘girls’ as animals, however they
are tamed because they are being controlled.
Before this the ‘tigers’ were wild and
dangerous.
• Larkin refers to the bible that states ‘who
can find a virtuous woman? For her price is far
above rubies’.
• If women were priced above rubies this could
mean that they were expensive.
The Fourth Stanza
• In this stanza Larkin describes the wannabes, that sit in the audience. ‘Manques’ are would-be scholars. The word also meaning ‘to lack’ in French, the scholars unfulfilled of their dreams. • Larkin uses a simile ‘like old plaids’ to describe the audience. Plaids could mean they are interwoven and engrossed into the music as its close to them.
The Fifth Stanza
• This stanza describes
how music affects Larkin himself.
He uses the pronouns ‘me’ and ‘’my’.
• The music makes him feel the way
love is said to make people feel.
However this could be a paradox
because he thinks he loves music,
but doesn’t know because
he’s never loved.
• ‘Like an enormous yes’ is a
caesura, this making an emphasise
on Larkin’s positive view.
The Sixth Stanza
• Larkin says that music understands him, and speaks to him like a person; it is the ‘natural noise of good’. • ‘Long-haired grief and scored pity’, implies that when Larkin listens to music he forgets his problems. This relates to the African Americans, how jazz music was based on their music and ‘scored pity’ is a pun on a musical score, referring to the pity felt when listening to this genre.
Comparison – Love Songs In Age
• Larkin wrote the poem about an elderly widow who finds the sheet music of some songs she used to play when she was young, and the cello plays a version of Bechet’s blues as a nostalgic song making her relive memories. • Both poems are about music and how they relate to memories and love.
Comparison – An Arundel Tomb
• In this poem Larkin has
a positive view on love and life, with
a happier attitude compared to his
usual themes.
• Love lasts through time,
whether this be as a sculptural
tomb or in the form of music.