Analysis Of Stop All The Clocks Cut Off The Telephone

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Love is one of the emotions that many cannot explain easily. Death is something almost everyone fears. Love and death creates a theme that gives the reader the ability to relate with the speaker of the poem. How does a person, or better yet, a lover react when faced with the death of their beloved? W.H. Auden’s “Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone” which was written in 1936 tells us the story of someone who has loved deeply and had that love taken from them. When one thinks of love, the visuals that come to mind are those that are joyful and pleasant. And when death comes, it creates a void within, forcing out anything that was remotely joyful and pleasant and fills that void with sadness, bitterness and anger. The author answers …show more content…

The first thing that stood out in Auden 's poem was the speaker. It seems that the author is the actual speaker in the poem and when read in its entirety it feels like a dirge or elegy. The emotion is raw and very intense. The opening line “Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone,” (Auden 1) comes across being filled with anger. A warning as something life altering has happened or about to. It is here that the speaker wants everything to stop, even time itself. As well as communication should come to a grinding halt. This line makes it clear that the speaker wants the attention of the readers before continuing any further. These eight words help create overall tone of the poem, which can be summed up into one word - somber. There are other elements throughout the poem that do touch on other emotions and tones, such as anger which was mentioned above about the opening line of the poem, and the others …show more content…

Slow and steady. The lines flow rather easily from the tongue and keep this steady pace through most of the poem till “I thought that love would last forever: I was wrong.” (Auden 12). Even though it keeps with the rhyming scheme, the choice of words and the placement causes the reader to stop and dwell on that line. Just as the speaker did. For a moment, it seemed he was caught up in describing how deep his love was that he may have forgotten just for a moment that his lover was truly dead, and when he remembered, he returned back to his

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