MEETING
AT NIGHT
Robert
Browning
Browning’s
“Meeting at Night” is brief poem about a lover’s desperate struggle to meet his
beloved and his reunion with her. The entire poem has a sense of movement to it
that reflects the speaker's desire to reunite with his love.
The speaker is at sea at night,
heading towards the black land in the distance. He briefly gives an image of
night at sea instead of describing it. The three lines in the first stanza
beginning with "And," suggest the speaker's urge to meet his beloved.
The speaker is uninterested in the beauty of "the yellow half-moon large
and low." Instead, his focus is on to bypass such elements so as to meet
her. He moves forward until he pulls his vessel up on to the sand. He walks a
mile along the beach and then crosses three fields to approaches his goal, a
farm. He taps at the window, sees the lighting of a match, and then is
overwhelmed by the beating of his and his lover's hearts as they reunite. Due
to the excitement and fear their heart beat is louder than their voice. Here the
poem ends abruptly maybe we can believe that once he has attained his happiness,
he has no further need for writing.
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