Zusammenfassung der Ressource
In Paris with you
- speaker in poem is upset about love
- breakdown of relationship
- sees himself as a victim
- gone to Paris with someone else
- still unhappy and discontented
- rather stay in hotel room than see city
- Form
- made up of one main
repeating stanza pattern
- third stanza stands out
- forcing rhyme-shows he's nervous
- songlike, lots of repetition including
main refrain and internal refrains
- emphasise the rhythm
- Structure
- 1st stanza- about narrator
- focus then turns to Paris
- 3rd stanza-signals his intent,
structured differently
- draws attention, feelings are changing
- penultimate verse turns attention to
surroundings & final verse onto his
companion
- ends with more assertive than
self-pitying tone
- Language about Paris
- Paris-city of love
- 'Im in Paris with you'
- direct address to lover
- feels uncomfortable about saying 'love' (last stanza)
- names most important
landmarks but suggest
they don't visit them
- 'if we do not go to the Louvre'
- 'not'-asking, controlling
- 'sodding Notre Dame'
- not interested in romantic parts to do with Paris
- emphasis not a love poem
- may be because being together is far more
important than romantic locations
- 'hotel walls are peeling'
- language of decay symbolises
his broken& negative mood&
nature of their relationship
- Humorous language
- nearly every stanza
contains either
contrived or
unexpected rhym
- 'talking wounded'
- pun-suggests mix of self pity and self awareness
- vunerable
- 'I'm a hostage'
- war imagery-feels trapped can't stop
himself feeling like this, pain is
inescapable
- 'I'm maroonded'
- dramatic/overtop
- sound comic- ironic
- 'where are we bound'
- responding to companions question or asking question
- 'bound'-doesn'y care about relationship + where it goes
- 'sleazy'-comic forced rhyme
- 'crack across the ceiling'
- may suggest lying on back
- 'all points south'- quite humorous
also makes clear what he is after
- has feelings for her now
- 'am I embarrassing you'-could be teasing or sympathetic
- could be talking to lover or reader
- 'don't talk to me of love'
- command/imperative
- anti-love poem
- short sentence
- aggressive
- 'downed drink or
two'-suggests he's
drunk, drowning sorrow
- 'doing this and that to what and whom'
- read as quite carless of the other person
- or read as euphemistic
- comes across as uncaring, insensitive
- 'learning what I am'
- lost some of his illusion about himself
- trying to find himself again
- 'slightest thing you do'
- suggest genuine attraction and close attention
- Feelings and attitudes
- self pity
- starts by focusing on own misery
- Lust
- bitternesss
- resentful about breakdown of previous relationship
- humour
- shown through the
puns and unexpected
rhyme