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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

Topic 5 (session A) - Sound > Meeting at night > Task E > Our comments

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Sounds and meanings
Alliteration and assonance
Rhyme
Alliteration and assonance revisited
Sound symbolism
Meeting at night
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Meeting at night

Task E - Our comments

The rhyme scheme of the poem has an unusual mirror-image structure, ABCCBA. This tends to emphasise the couplet rhyme in the middle of each stanza. The lines involved are heavily involved in sound symbolism, each representing a significant moment in the poem. The description in stanza 1 of the waves 'leaping' around the boat represents them as if they are waking in a fiery fashion from sleep. This prefigures the danger in stanza 2 of the lovers waking whoever is against their romantic involvement. The part of stanza 2 that alludes to this fear is the equivalent two lines, involving the CC rhyme again. The couplet rhyme connection between the two stanzas thus helps us to see the content of the two pairs of lines as parallel in meaning (via the 'parallelism rule').

There do not appear to be any significant assonantal patterns in addition to those covered by the sound symbolism analysis in Task C. There are, however, some clear alliterative patterns not included in that analysis.

The static description in the first two lines of stanza 1 is marked by /l/ alliteration and the following, more active and contrasting, two lines are marked by an alternation between /t/ and /l/. There is also foregrounding via /p/ and /s/ alliteration in the last two lines of the stanza on 'pushing prow' and 'speed . . . slushy sand'. This could highlight the possibility of an allusion to the sexual act ('pushing prow' = phallus, 'cove' = vagina, 'slushy sand' = interior of vagina and 'quench its speed' = moment of ejaculation), prefiguring what can be inferred to happen in stanza 2 after the lovers meet (an interpretation strengthened by the companion poem, 'Parting at Morning').

The /s/ alliteration in 'sea-scented' does not appear to have a clear interpretative connection. The representation of the tap at the window and the lighting of the match has a high density of stop consonants in words other than those involved in the sound symbolism already examined. This helps to foreground further the onomatopoeic quality of those lines.

Overall, then, a poem which uses sound symbolism is unusually densely also uses rhyme and alliteration to augment the structurally symbolic enactment found in the poem.

Additional Information

Interestingly, after we had written the material for 'Meeting at Night', we found two commentaries on it (including its onomatopoeic effects), one by the critic, F. R. Leavis, and the other by the critics and stylisticians, Walter Nash and Ronald Carter. If you compare these accounts, you can see some of the similarities and differences between traditional practical criticism and stylistic analysis. All three accounts are similar with respect to their understanding of the poem (though some minor details are a bit different, and Leavis makes more explicit evaluative statements than the other two). Leavis's account refers briefly to the language of the poem but does not analyse it at all. Both our account and the account by Nash and Carter go into much more analytical detail. Ours is more detailed and explicit than Nash and Carter's, but we each point out some relevant details which Leavis's account omits. Consequently, there is a clear contrast between (a) our approach, and (b) the account by Nash and Carter on the one hand, and Leavis's on the other. This contrast becomes even more clear if one takes their readership into account: Leavis's more perfunctory account is an article from an important academic journal, whereas the stylistics-oriented accounts are both written to help undergraduates gain a better grasp of the poem.

References

Leavis, F. R. (1975) 'Imagery and Movement'. In Martin, Graham and P. N. Furbank (eds.) Twentieth Century poetry: Critical Essays and Documents, The Open University, 33-49.
Nash, W. and Carter, R. (1990) Seeing through Language, Blackwell Publishers, 119-129.

 


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