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CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF W.H AUDEN'S 'REFUGEE BLUES’

Put in simple terms, this is a poem about the plight of a specific group of refugees displaced and arriving in a country that is generally hostile to their situation, even if well-meaning. Written in 1939, Auden focuses on the German Jews arriving in the UK at that time, though the poem has taken in a timeless quality due to the commonality of its subject. Indeed, it is not until stanza 8 that Auden identifies his Refugees. Possibly he is trying to show the reluctance of the persecuted to identify themselves for fear of further persecution, possibly he is allowing the narrator –we assume a husband – to present the key ideas of his poem without the idea of Jewishness in some way getting in the way of a universal message. He has chosen the title Refugee Blues to link to the protest and subculture of the enslaved Blacks, who developed this musical form in the Southern USA, and has written a poem in which the rhythm and rhyme scheme (AAB) reflects the musical style. This is another way of linking the fate of the Jews with a more universal theme of suffering. Remember that this was written in 1939 – before the Holocaust and before any real idea of the savagery and brutality of Hitler and Stalin.
There is a wide range of powerful imagery used to build up the overall picture. In the opening line, the choice of the word “souls” is important since it not only suggests a religious or sacred connotation, but also serves to remove barriers between peoples – all are souls whether in “mansions” or “holes”. Auden points out the artificial nature of human segregation here. He refers to a Yew tree in stanza 3, locating the poem in England but also setting up, by means of the reference to the Spring blossoms, an idea of hope for the future which must be allowed to permeate this poem, negative though it is. The tree is carried into the reference in the next line to “old passports” – in essence dead trees- which suggests that hope may not actually exist for all the people of the world. Auden uses Pathetic Fallacy in stanzas in stanzas 7&10 with great effect. Hitler’s speeches are metaphorically linked with thunder and therefore with threat and destructive power and in the final stanza the snow serves to provide chill and a bleaching of emotion to accompany the remarkable prediction of the events in Russia some years later.
Other linguistic devices that might be of interest include the direct speech in stanza 4, the use of the word ”politely” in stanza 5, and the repetition of “my dear” which runs through the poem in an understated comment on the affection and love between the couple.
The poem’s meaning is clearly expressed in Stanzas 2 & 9. This is more than simple comment on the fate of the displaced. IN Stanza 2 Auden refers to the fact that “once we had a country and we thought it far” and seems to be looking beyond the homeland just left back to Palestine, the traditional homeland of the Jewish race. If this is the case, then a reader must sense a stronger political comment here. The Jews would be granted Palestine in 1947 to set up the state of Israel and since this time the area has been riven with conflict. Is Auden suggesting as early as 1939 that this should be the aim of the refugees? Whatever your opinion on this, the harbour portrayed in Stanza 9 offers two meanings. First the harbour and the quays are reflections of travel – of the great Diaspora undertaken from Germany in the 30s and elsewhere throughout history as persecuted peoples wait to embark to escape their tormentors. Auden links this idea with that of the contrast between the freedom of the animal kingdom, seemingly within touching distance ( but still out of reach) and the persecution or polite lack of interest shown to the narrator of the poem.
The poem has an effect beyond the apparent simplicity of its message and it gains in power form the musical form and the ideas within it. The reader will notice, hopefully with a shudder of self-recognition, that the Jews are viewed as thieves of “our daily bread”, a phrase which links the accusers directly to the Christian community and shows up the innate hypocrisy of many “people of faith”.
Jonathan Peel SGS 2012