Preview

Behavior of Fish in an Egyptian Tea Garden Commentry

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
519 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Behavior of Fish in an Egyptian Tea Garden Commentry
Behavior of Fish in an Egyptian Tea Garden

‘Behavior of Fish in an Egyptian Tea Garden’ is a narrative poem by Keith Douglas observing the actions of a seductress and a variety of men dining in an Egyptian Tea Garden. Douglas effectively employs a profusion of techniques including metaphors, similes, extended metaphor, and imagery to show the animalistic nature of men when beguiled by a ‘white stone’. The poem’s subtext is the ugliness of physical attraction that has been warped by lust for filthy lucre.

The Egyptian Tea Garden portrays the sometimes cruel and heartless nature of human desire. It uses an extended metaphor comparing the wealthy, powerful men beguiled by a beautiful woman sensually eating ice cream with a variety of predatory fish enamored by a ‘white stone’. Douglas uses metaphors, ‘a cotton magnate, an important fish’, ‘a crustacean old man’, ‘a lean dark mackerel’ and ‘gallants in shoals’, to highlight the similarities between the actions of the men and the predictable behaviors of the fish in an exaggerated manner. The men’s distasteful actions, ‘teeth parted in a stare’, ‘sucks on a straw…laxly’, ‘idling..stays to watch’, are compared with the behavior of fish, ‘pause so to nibble or tug’. However, the woman is compared to an inanimate object, ‘white stone’, having negative connotations of heartlessness, coldness, uselessness and hardness.

This sense of the ugliness of attraction warped by materialism is powerfully suggested in the portrayal of the ‘crustacean old man’. Crustaceans are an ancient, more basic form of life as is the form of desire the old man represents. The alliteration of hard ‘c’ sounds, ‘crustacean…clamped…coldly’, suggest the harshness, agedness and vileness of the character. The images created, ‘clamped to his chair…fissures where eyes should be…teeth are parted in a stare’, also reflect his unattractive disposition. ‘Teeth parted in a stare’ is a grotesque image suggesting his salacious desire to ‘eat her’,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The story portrays a story of a fisherman who has the rare opportunity to meet an amazing creature. This is why he describes the fish as “venerable”, “homely”, and “battered”. He also stated that the fish did not fight at all; which does not become significant until near to the end of the poem when he realizes that this “tremendous” fish has finally submitted itself and given up.…

    • 476 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The artwork invites interpretation. It demands it. The setting is not static, it is made to change, vary, and affect the pieces throughout the season. The steel works are abstract and boldly placed, all in the open rather than tucked into a corner. The Crab is one of the most prolific sculptures in the garden, and it conveys a great sense of freedom. The limbs are fluid and varied, as if it could move in any direction at a moment’s notice. It is spread out, huge, but also delicate, commandeering the full range of its space. It seems to emerge from its shell in full flight.…

    • 1332 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    “‘The black bass thinks he can be king of the fish, but all he wants is to eat them. The black bass is a killer. But the real kind is the golden carp, Tony. He does not eat his own kind-’ Cico’s eyes remained glued on the dark waters. His body was motionless, like a spring awaiting release. We had been whispering since we arrived at the pond, why I don’t know, except that it was just one of those places where one can communicate only in whispers, like church. We sat for a long time, waiting for the golden carp. It was very pleasant to sit in the warm sunshine and watch the pure waters drift by. The drone of the summer insects and grasshoppers made me sleepy. The lush green grass was cool, and…

    • 2634 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    "Near the threshold he stopped, horror-stricken at the sight of a thing. He was being looked at by a dead man who was seated with his back against a columnlike tree. The corpse was dressed in a uniform that had once been blue, but was now faded to a melancholy shade of green. The eyes, staring at the youth, had changed to the dull hue to be seen on the side of a dead fish. The mouth was open. Its red had changed to an appalling yellow. Over the gray skin of the face ran little ants. One was trundling some sort of bundle along the upper lip.”…

    • 1091 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On the both poems, D. H. Lawrence’s “snake” and Elizabeth bishop’s “Fish,” both author mentions about animals. Both writer treated animals as animals at first, but later on, they compare those animals with human. The explanation of visual, the time when two authors think those animals as human, and the ironic feeling that both author have demonstrate that both speakers state of mind change.…

    • 790 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Through an exploration of the boundaries between social constraint and inner compulsion, Melville and Chekov reveal the restrictions forced upon one’s personal desires as they struggle to find a balance between conflicting values and social norms. Anna and Gurov in ‘The Lady with the Dog’ are restrained by the socially expected conventions in their marriages, inhibiting their ability to express their inner compulsion of desire. Chekov reveals their yearning to escape their individual lives as they cope with personal troubles by distancing themselves from marriage through a sexual relationship with each other. When away from the city of Yalta, their lives seem their own without the social constraint forced upon them; however, in the presence of others their marriage binds them, forcing them to question their affair. Through lingering silences their relationship reveals passion yet also the underlying sorrow that Anna feels for betraying her husband. During these moments of silence, they struggle in a personal battle of questioning, perplexed by the conflict between their inner compulsions and the restraints of society as they are unable to fully indulge themselves in their passion for each other. The image employed by Chekov of the “long grey fence” (Chekhov 1998, p. 371) keeping them apart alludes to this sense of restraint and personal desires as a symbol of restriction. The fence keeps Gurov from Anna, fending him from her as their love is forbidden in the eyes of society. Their freedom is held within this fence as their desire cannot fully be embellished under the guise of society’s rules. While in Melville’s ‘Bartleby, the Scrivener’, Bartleby shows the uprising of a world of preference where his inner compulsions drive him to defy all rules of social constraint. In order to live,…

    • 1405 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the fourth stanza the poet describes what lies beneath the ocean. People look at nature as being beautiful but Foulcher’s uses the adjective ‘savage’ to describe the fish in the ocean as a symbol of aggression. The writer describes the depths of the ocean as ‘dark’ as well as the instinctive behaviour of the fish. The line ‘savage dark fish’ is a short intense line that creates a threating rhythm; this line is a strong symbol of people’s fear of the danger that exists in nature.…

    • 562 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Other Wes Moore

    • 1687 Words
    • 7 Pages

    (Warning: This novel contains some explicit language. If this is an issue for you or your child, please contact the English Department Chair at karthur@bcps.org to discuss. An alternate assignment can be created.)…

    • 1687 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout Jewett’s “A White Heron,” it is evident that Jewett created an alternative to a world dominated by men and their values and interests. A lonely Sylvia is introduced as a friendless girl living on her grandmother’s farm after moving there from the noisy town over a year prior. Daily, she explores nature about the farm until her grandmother Mrs. Tilley calls her back to the house. Already, it seems as though there are no men to be found anywhere near Mrs. Tilley’s farm. With no father or other male family members around, the idea of a man-less world between Mrs. Tilley and her grand daughter emerges.…

    • 924 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One feature of the behaviour of mankind is the capacity for knowledge and the creative use of it. An example of this is literature, and the creature is exposed to this through the three books he finds in the “wood”. It is clear that these three books, which the creature considers to be a “prize”, have a great effect on him, but it is not so much that behaviour of man which is required to produce these books, than the behaviour of man which is presented in the contents of the writing, which shapes the creature’s attitude to life. The significance of these books for the creature is that they provide an explanation for the actions and emotions of men and women which he has already seen at first hand, as well as for those he can only read about. This enables the creature to have a more profound understanding of life as a concept and a preoccupation, and thus he is able to consciously and subconsciously construct an attitude to life which is the cause for his ensuing actions. The other significance of his access to written text is that it facilitates the opportunity to him of not only understanding the language, but learning how to express himself, speak with reason, and construct an argument. As Peter Brooks writes, “As a verbal creation, he [the creature] is the very opposite of the monstrous. He is a sympathetic and persuasive participant in Western Culture.” While I agree with this idea which is vital for the effectiveness of the creature’s plea for “acceptance” from his “father” and for Victor to “consent” to his “request”, I believe there is, on the other hand, something monstrous in the way that such eloquence, logic and persuasiveness comes from the mouth of such a “hideously deformed and loathsome” creature.…

    • 1036 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Robert Gray

    • 686 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In ‘The meatworks’ Gray presents a vivid and disturbing description of a North Coast slaughter house. It demonstrates Roberts’s concern of the cruelty and indifference of humankind’s relationship with nature. Sensory imagery is one of the strongest techniques used by the poet. ‘...grinding around inside it, meat or not, solidified like candle wax.’ This appeals to the reader through the use of vivid images that are not only visual but also aural and tactile. Gray creates stifling, oppressive images that characterises the repulsive atmosphere meatworks. The use of personification in the phrase “…gutters crawled off” emphasises the environment in which he is working. It suggests that the gutter is an oozing beast. The line ’blood around his finger nails’ can be interpreted in two ways depending on the reader. One is the literal meaning, of the unpleasantness of been unable to get the blood from his job off his fingers, while it can also be interpreted as that his job makes him feel guilty all the time, where the blood is the guilt. Robert gray intended to show readers the inhumanity of the acts take out during the poem ‘Meatworks,’ some people due to their personal contexts such as vegetarianism are more strongly affected by the poem and its issues, while others aren’t so concerned.…

    • 686 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Secret Goldfish

    • 606 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The fish tank is a symbol of the ebb and flow between good and bad times. The fish’s existence which relies solely on the owner 's hand is predictable only by the constancy of the protagonists’ marriage. When the marriage is stable the aquarium is clean, the fish is well fed and happy “wondrously free, swimming – for all he knew – in Lake Superior… free of desires, needs, and everything else” (218). This clean state represents the favorable parts of life. When the marriage become unstable the opposite happens, the aquarium became a filthy mess, “the water so clotted it had become a substantial mass, a putty within the fish was presumably swimming, or dead” (215). The dirty stage symbolizes the base facets of life; the water is restricted, dark, and full of need. The fish tank is a representation of the ephemeral nature of life and the good and bad times we all face in our own lives.…

    • 606 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Hard by the lilied Nile I saw A duskish river-dragon stretched along, The brown habergeon of his limbs enamelled With sanguine almandines and rainy pearl: And on his back there lay a young one sleeping, No bigger than a mouse; with eyes like beads, And a small fragment of its speckled egg Remaining on its harmless, pulpy snout; A thing to laugh at, as it gaped to catch The baulking merry flies. In the iron jaws Of the great devil-beast, like a pale soul Fluttering in rocky hell, lightsomely flew A snowy trochilus, with roseate beak Tearing the hairy leeches from his throat.…

    • 288 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Moonstone

    • 499 Words
    • 2 Pages

    First, the narrator uses a satirical tone to create humor about the naïve lives of gentlefolks. The tone is also serious to emphasize the theme of socioeconomic status. One sentence says, “You dabbled in nasty mud, and made pies, when you were a child; and you dabble in nasty science…” The reader may feel as if the narrator is teasing them, by telling them how foolishly they are living their lives. The formal diction used by the author contains a simple vocabulary, yet the points made by the narrator are harsh and critical. Words such as, “nasty”; “cruel”; “stupid”; “curiosity”; and “dirty” have a negative connotation that show how captious the narrator is towards the idle rich. The narrator states, “In the one case and in the other, the secret of it is, that you have got nothing to think of in your poor empty head, and nothing to do with your poor idle hands.” The animosity towards the idle rich sets the mood of the excerpt. The narrator indirectly states that gentlefolks do nothing with their lives, and slaves do it all for them.…

    • 499 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A Hunger Artist Analysis

    • 1600 Words
    • 7 Pages

    It is ironic that a person skilled in the art of slaughtering and slicing meat is chosen to watch over a man who starves himself as art. A man who cannot eat is guarded by those who slaughter meat for food as a living, seemingly mocking the hunger artist’s situation. This circumstance is similar in Bartleby, the Scrivener when the grubman provided good meals to Bartleby at the lawyer’s expense. The grubman shoved food at Bartleby even when he renounced everything including food, preferring to waste away but food is still given to him as if teasing him. Despite the constant watch over the hunger artist, no one believed that he actually was starving, that he was cheating. The distrust from the watchmen and the spectators caused the artist mental suffering and loneliness. He longed for the appreciation and understanding by others for his deep devotion and trueness to the rigorousness of his art; thus, he is left feeling dissatisfied since he is the only one who is for sure that he was starving all the time and not cheating. He is unable to reach the full capability of his art because no one believed in him. The hunger artist’s popularity never had anything to do with his art, but it was because of the engineered spectacle of the…

    • 1600 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays