The Whitsun Weddings
The Whitsun Weddings describes a train journey on a hot day, upon
which the protagonist, written from first person, comes upon a wedding,
describing how “at first” he “didn’t notice what a noise the weddings made.”
Like a lot of his
poems, The Whitsun Weddings includes
admirable depictions of nature, even in the “tall heat” that surrounds him. He
describes the train itself as being an impermeable room, much like the
ambulance in Ambulances, relating
himself as though they’re connected in some way, explaining “we ran behind the
backs of houses,” and using the rhythm and rhyming scheme of ABABCDECDE to mimic
the actions of the train, with the shorter stanzas used occasionally to show
the alternating speed.
The language used in
this particular poem places focus on the senses, particularly at the beginning
where we are exposed to the “cushions hot,” “smell of grass” and the “blinding
windscreens,” and creates a setting and atmosphere for the readers to become
indulged in. It seems yellow, sleepy and warm, and would reason for why the
train is described in an admiring manner by the protagonist, as it acts as a
shield from the outside, a screen to on look the scenes they go by “for miles
inward” - the length of the journey relating to this also.
Much like the rhythm
of the poem, the language used throughout gives a sense of flow and calmness,
and so when the “noise” of “the weddings,” it seems a disruption to the character
and his journey, a reason for his change of attitude towards a time of
celebration.
The build-up this
disruption is foreshadowed by the depletion of nature and the entry of more
industrial scenery, such as the “acres of dismantled cars,” making the wedding
itself seem related to this modern lifestyle in that Larkin shares the same
disgruntled view towards it.
Again, relating to
many of Larkin’s poems in which he describes women, they play a predominant
part in him noticing the ceremony, describing the “girls, in parodies of
fashions,” “grinning” in awe. His focus on their wear makes the people featured
in the poem seem of a lesser class, a more simple-minded group of people,
perhaps due to or a cause for their endorsement in such activities.
Very bluntly, the
mothers are described as being “loud and fat,” and the “uncles shouting smut.” He
uses these simplistic and cruel words in order to present an undignified set of
morals here, as well as an endorsement of a modern way of living. Usually,
Larkin presents his own self as being above people who follow certain ways of
living and The Whitsun Weddings is no
different, with the ceremony being used as a symbol of consumerism on a large
scale.
Eventually, the
newly-married couples join the train, once “three-quarters empty,” a delightful
amount for the relaxing journey it’s taken, now crowded and annoying. It’s a
cheap mode of access for a wedding too, perhaps relating with the demeaning
manner that Larkin looks onto lower-class people as whole.
The action of moving
away from the families and “frowning children” on a train, a long and warm
journey for Larkin himself, can be seen as a symbolic gesture of people leaving
their home-lives to pursue something bigger, with marriage being a gateway into
different opportunities for people. He even begins to relate the wedding to a
funeral, remembering how “the women shared the secret like a happy funeral,”
giving the act of “moving on” a glum undertone of a passageway onto death.
Cynical people tend
to view weddings as ‘the end of happiness,’ and Larkin certainly presents his
views in this way, mocking the “girls, gripping their handbags” staring “at a
religious wounding,” a scornful way of presenting their sadness at not being
married themselves, particularly after he describes it so unpleasantly. In a
sense, he sees the world around him as predictable when it comes to
modern-living. Unlike nature, which can be explored and experienced by all of
the senses, Larkin sees weddings, for instance, as a fake ‘key’ to happiness.
In the last two
stanzas, Larkin’s language becomes more metaphorical and symbolic, representing
his struggle to accept the route that humans have taken to respect what he
views as pointless ceremonies. Passing by the many settings of adventure and
prosper, the married couples “watched the landscape,” “and none thought of the
others they would never meet,” Larkin juxtaposing the journey they take to his,
making theirs seem pointless and a waste of time whilst his was a calming trip
of comfort.
The final stanza
builds slowly, bringing Larkin’s view to a climactic end. The language used
represents time passing, perhaps over centuries, in order to exaggerate the
emptiness he feels life has, or human’s own insignificance. The train’s journey
comes to an end, sadly using the words “done,” “blackened,” “slowed,” “swelled,”
and “falling” to symbolise an upcoming end, all negative.
“A sense of falling,”
he says, “like an arrow shower.” It is as though he feels sympathetic for those
married, and this display set before him has allowed him to explore the
meaningless of living and doing these shamed activities. A life which he views
a pointless, the train journey eventually being used as a symbol of being, a
process of evolution and change, only to be terminated into “blackness,”
explaining the inevitability of death, and therefore the pointlessness of
consumerism.