English, asked by rp2759950, 6 months ago

Describe the journey of the night mail.​

Answers

Answered by rv21060
12

Answer:

The poet describes the journey of a mail train through steep slopes and landscapes till reaching its destination in time, It brings cheques, postal orders and letters for different cross- sections of the society, It moves as a unique force to face every kind of challenge.

Answered by bijiyabharti
13

Answer:

Analysis

The charming poem “Night Mail” was written in 1936 to accompany the documentary film of the same year and the same title. The film concerned a London, Midland, and Scottish Railway (LMS) mail train traveling from London to Scotland. It was produced by GPO Film Unit, directed by Harry Watt and Basil Wright, and narrated by John Grierson and Stuart Legg. Auden’s poem was read toward the end of the film, set to music by Benjamin Britten. Lines were chopped and changed to fit the film. The basic intent of the film, at least superficially, was to reveal how the mail was distributed by train.

The rhythm of the film matches the train’s movement, and dreamy loneliness pervades much of it. It has become a classic in film circles. Auden is said to have written the verses with the aid of a stopwatch as he set them to the film. A reader can almost hear the train chugging along as it brings the letters to the people of England and Scotland, especially in the first part, made up of eight rhymed, four-beat couplets. Auden was happy to embrace the new medium of film, as well as to tout the accomplishments of 1930s laborers, perhaps influenced by Karl Marx.

The train brings a variety of letters to a variety of people. The mail is open to all, rich and poor. The train itself is personified as a calm, methodical, and kind being, no mere bureaucratic functionary. It is always on time despite the “steady climb” as it barely disturbs the countryside. Warmth and fondness about the train suffuse the poem.

The poem’s second section writes of the train’s descent into Scotland. The landscape is a bit more industrial, with “fields of apparatus, the furnaces / Set on the dark plain like gigantic chessmen.” The one stanza’s eight lines have irregular meter. Scotland longs for its news with anticipation. International news was particularly important as Adolf Hitler was becoming increasingly aggressive and attempts at appeasement were faltering, far from the glens and lochs of Scotland.

In the third section one might imagine the excitement of a crowd receiving all the letters, though in reality most people are still asleep. Auden beautifully shows the vast array of things sent by post, things that most people have received at one time or another: letters, bills, applications, statements of love, gossip, news. In a sense this is the written version of the entire spectrum of human interaction, from the most quotidian to the most meaningful, everything that is worth communicating across the border. People are knit together by this correspondence, no matter how trivial the mail might seem.

More than 75 years later, a reader must remember the physicality of getting letters. While electronic communication was far from new, it was extremely common to communicate through the mail, and a postman might even knock on the door to deliver the mail. The diversity of people and communications is mirrored by the kinds of paper, “of every hue, / The pink, the violet, the white and the blue.”

In the final section Auden depicts local people asleep in their warm beds, dreaming of local things or of monsters. Soon they will be awake and eager for the mail. The end of the poem asks, after all, “Who can bear to feel himself forgotten?” The poem thus is deeply sympathetic and compassionate for individual human beings, expressing the “quickening of the heart” of the person who might learn he has been remembered by someone else as the mail comes to the door. The poem celebrates human connections. It is hopeful and sweet, charming and memorable.

Explanation:

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