Sir Richard
New member
I'll give you a few thoughts on it, but explanation?
It's a happy and sunny poem that turns dark. All the revellers in the sunny sea, carefree and cavorting as they might be, fail to think about the power of the waves and that the storm will sweep them and their little lives away; that's the literal imagery I'd say.
For some underlying stuff we have the bounty and the slendour of the outward appearance at the beginning, and then we're beaten over the head with the fact that this pretty exterior hides "an emptiness in the stomache, a deprivation" that hides in the town, away from the beach. Humanity is false, we're told, and hypocritical, and low.
Last - and it's a doozy, read the lines with "San Sebastian" in, one after the other. How's that? From high to low, from pretty to foul and fat, from light to dark..... ?
And the bathers may well all die. And does the poet/observer care, do you think? Was he sad from the start?
It's a happy and sunny poem that turns dark. All the revellers in the sunny sea, carefree and cavorting as they might be, fail to think about the power of the waves and that the storm will sweep them and their little lives away; that's the literal imagery I'd say.
For some underlying stuff we have the bounty and the slendour of the outward appearance at the beginning, and then we're beaten over the head with the fact that this pretty exterior hides "an emptiness in the stomache, a deprivation" that hides in the town, away from the beach. Humanity is false, we're told, and hypocritical, and low.
Last - and it's a doozy, read the lines with "San Sebastian" in, one after the other. How's that? From high to low, from pretty to foul and fat, from light to dark..... ?
And the bathers may well all die. And does the poet/observer care, do you think? Was he sad from the start?