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FREE ESSAY ON DOVER BEACH

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"Dover's Beach"
A review of Matthew Arnold's poem "Dover's Beach". -- 650 words;

Matthew Arnold's "Dover Beach"
An analysis of the literary techniques and the primary themes in Matthew Arnold's poem "Dover Beach." -- 2,522 words; MLA

"Dover Beach"
A critical analysis of the symbolism in Matthew Arnold's poem "Dover Beach". -- 900 words;

Matthew Arnold's "Dover Beach"
This essay examines and analyzes the nineteenth century classic "Dover Beach". -- 1,520 words;

"Dover Beach" ( Matthew Arnold ) and "God's Grandeur" ( Gerard Manley Hopkins )
"Matthew Arnold, in "Dover Beach" (1848?), and Gerard Manley Hopkins, in "God's Grandeur" (1877), are both concerned with the question of the presence of God or religious faith in the world. -- 2,250 words;

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DOVER BEACH

"Sea is life"
Dover Beach is a very mood-evoking poem. We are first met with an admiration for the sea
and different emotions that draws to the observer. However, as the poem progresses we are
gradually introduced to a large metaphor for love and like the sea are able to evoke many
moods, and different emotions, whether prosperous or decayed. The poet describes the
emotions with extreme passion and perhaps with slight hysteria. We are given as sense of
loss by this turmoil, which becomes clearer in the last stanza. 
The title of this poem, "Dover Beach", really sets the scene to the reader almost
instantly. The beach, with its white cliffs, help give the readers a sense of dominance
and magnificence. The poet may have done this as to set the mood for the opening stanza.
For others it may provoke a thought or memory of the past such as the childhood holidays
with your parents. The lines in the poem could be provoking these thoughts so that you
can empathize later to what he is experiencing in the poem. The title itself however,
does not give you any emotional insight into the poem. I feel the poet did this as to not
alert the reader to what is going happen in further in the poem. 
The poems opening stanza is to begin with very soft and peaceful, "The sea is calm
tonight"(Line 1). The words the poet uses are pleasing such as "Gleams, sweet,
glimmering"(Line 4, 6,5). The mood for the poem is being set. The reader is filled with
visions of peace and a sense of being content "sweet is the night air!"(Line 6). However,
the mood of the poem dramatically changes. The poet begins to use words, which changes
the mood and are vastly different from the previous lines, "roar, slow, sadness"(Line 9,
13, 14). This sudden emotional change to me is a symbol of his love or life. Once the
poet's life was calm like the seas in the opening line. The poet's life has no changed
into turmoil of emotions, which are charged like the sea "the waves draw back, and fling,
At their return/"(Lines 10-11). The first stanza is explaining the sudden change in mood
in the poem that is very similar to the changing mood of the sea. 
In the second stanza we are actually able to learn more of the poets analogy. The poet
believes that the noise of the sea can bring in the "flow of human misery"(Line 18). This
is what he claims happened to Sophocles. This analogy is perhaps what also happened to
the poet's life. The calm sea turned into a continual warning swash in his soul which
brought with it misery. However the last line of the stanza tells us that this noise does
not bring with it just human misery but also a thought, that the poet does not elaborate
this theory so we are left to assume this changes from person to person. "in the sound a
thought"(Line 19).
The sea again in the third stanza represents his loss of faith. This loss of faith is
elaborately described as disappearing in the nights wind "to the breath of the
night-wind"(Lines 26-27). Here the poet builds up a clear picture of the wind being
personified, "to the breath"(Line 26) and taking this faith down to the "vast edges"(Line
27), and with it also the "naked shingles of the world"(Line 28).
This idea of naked shingles is perhaps how the poet feels himself to be. He isolates
himself from anyone else. He is left bare naked to have all of his ideals taken away from
him by the simple element the wind. By using the different moods of the sea, calm and
powerful, the poet is able to make a connection to life. The way the sea continuously
bashes, hurling rocks up against the sand, gives us a sense of relentlessness of some
emotional strain on his life, " Begin, and cease, and then again begin"(Line 12).
The final stanza is an incorporation of the whole poem, as well as confirming to the
reader what it is the poet is trying to explain. The final stanza, begins like that of
the opening stanza, using a very appealing, gentle opening, as well as words to support
this, " love, true, dreams, beautiful and new"(Lines 29, 31, 32). However, again like the
stanzas preceding it, the mood changes again, which tries to tell us that no matter what
happens, whether we are true, or in love, we will never understand this beauty of the
sea. The poet helps to give an understanding to the reader that the sea is one element
that one can never understand and so is life itself. This poem was fantastic in
expressing what the poet is expressing from his heart. 

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