00201--'Dover Beach' mourns the loss of faith in the modern times. OR Discuss the poem as an elegy on the spiritual degeneration in modern times. [Matthew Arnold] [English Literature free notes]




Mathew Arnold's 'Dover Beach' is a beautiful lyric which describes the helpless uncertainty and doubt of the Victorian period.  There was a gradual decline in man's faith in God and religion.  The Victorian mind was dazzled by the achievements of science and material progress.  Faced with this choice between the world of faith and the world of materialism, the Victorian found himself in a sad Plight.  In Dover Beach Mathew Arnold pictures this inability of man to make the right choice.  The poet uses the sea as a symbol to bring home this idea.
            The poem has a very beautiful setting.  It is a very peaceful quiet moonlit night at the Dover Beach.  The sea is calm and full.  The Dover cliff stands out glimmering and vast.  The night air is sweet.  The tides coming to the shore fling down pebbles on the stand with a clattering sound.  The poet watches this ceaseless action of the waves.  He listens to the rhythmic cadence of the waves and he detects the eternal note of sadness in it.
            The sad note is not only the poet's own personal feeling.  It is the universal note of sadness.  The poet now takes us back through history to the time of Sophocles.  He too listened to the sad music of the waves; it brought into his mind the miserable plight of humanity, its turbid ebb and flow.  Though the reference is to Sophocles, Arnold bridges the present with the past. 
            From the real sea Arnold now goes to the metaphorical sea.  It is the sea of faith.  It was once full, beautifully spread out and deep.  This sea of faith once encircled and protected the entire world's faith in God and religion sustained humanity in those days of glory.  The poet feels a sense of loss and utter despair as he looks on the dimly lit scene before him. 
            The sea of faith is no longer full.  It has receded with a long melancholy roar like the sea in front of him has receded exposing the pebbles and leaving the shore littered with shingles.  Arnold has in mind a society which has moved away from religious faith cherished in the past and is now torn between faith and the glamour of materialism.
            Arnold thinks that there is only one clear solution for man to get out of this dilemma.  It is the power of true love.  The last part of the poem thus reveals Arnold's abiding faith in the power of true love to console man when he is plunged in despair.
            The world of science and technology seems to be a dream world, so beautiful, so varied and so new.  The poet feels that there is no real joy and happiness in this world.  No joy, no light, no certitude, it is only a beautiful mirage.
            The poet is once again plunged in despair as he looks on the dimly lit sea scape.  The tide has receded so low that the sea shore seems to expand in to a vast dark plain.  The poet now visualizes ignorant armies clashing on this battle field.  They are in utter confusion and fight without knowing friend from foe.  Thus Arnold closes the poem giving us a terrifying picture of anarchy and futility. 




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