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BEAT BEAT DRUMS

James Bettencourt
February 11, 2000
ENG 1021
Dr. O'Hara
The Sounds of War
When a country is at war it is the common people who suffer. In Walt Whitman's poem,
"Beat! Beat! Drums," the speaker signifies the sounds of war. The speaker, listening to
the banging of war drums and shrill sounds of bugles, relates the interruption these war
sounds have on the harmony of people's lives. Whitman uses the sounds of drums as an
audible image to show its effects on the common people.
Whitman uses two types of imagery to express the cold indirect and direct effects of war.
Whitman using the loud banging of drums and the blows of bugles creates a war atmosphere
throughout the whole poem. He brings in the sounds of war at the beginning and end of
every section to ensure the reader has a feeling that the drums are never ending. For
example, Whitman starts the first section with: "Beat! beat! drums - blow bugles blow",
and ends the first section with a feeling that the drums are only getting louder: "So
fierce you whirr and pound you drums - so shrill you bugles blow. 
Whitman writes of how the war is felt on two different levels: one as a community, and
the other as personal. Using imagery, the sounds travel "through the windows-through
doors-burst like a ruthless force," as if the drums and bugles are shattering through the
homes of the common people. In the first section Whitman shows of how the sounds of war
effect the personal lives of the common people. Whitman uses imagery to show how the
drums and bugles interrupt everyday life. This is evident in the lines:
"Into the solemn church, and scatter the congregation 
Into the school where the scholar is studying;
Leave not the bridegroom quiet-no happiness must he have with his bride,
Nor the peaceful farmer any peace, ploughing his field or gathering his grain,"
These four lines expressed by Whitman have an underlying meaning in each image he
presents. Whitman uses the image of a "solemn church" to show how people must go through
each day, with an empty feeling in their souls, knowing their lives' are at risk. Using
the image of a "school" being disrupted; Whitman is able to express the idea that during
a time of war no education is able to take place. His underlying meaning, having no
education in a child's life only leads to an uneducated group of people in the future.
Again Whitman is able to create an image of how war effects peoples' lives both directly
and indirectly. "Leave not the bridegroom quiet- no happiness must he have with his
bride," Whitman uses the image of a "bridegroom" leaving his wife to show how young men
during this time are called off to duty to defend their country or side. The underlying
meaning of this is that new families are unable to be started because of the separation
of husbands and wives. "Nor the peaceful farmer any peace," Whitman uses the image of a
farmer to express the idea that no food will be grown because of war taking place.
People's everyday work life is effected by this war only creating problems for the
future. 
Whitman uses wonderful images to show how the war affects peoples' jobs. "No bargainers
by day- no brokers or speculators-would/ they continue?" The speaker expresses how even
the rich persons of the community cannot carry on with their jobs. Whitman's underlying
meaning is that because of the war an economic depression might happen in the future. 
Whitman takes every section and turns them into a part of the war. Each section is how a
war would take over a particular community. In the first section Whitman talks of all
quiet and peaceful places; "church", "school", and "field." These show how the drums are
easy to disrupt these calming places. Then Whitman finishes the first section as the
drums are getting louder or the war is getting bigger, "So fierce you whirr and pound
your drums- so shrill you bugles blow." This line states that the speaker can start to
feel the sounds of the drums and not only hear them. The second section the speaker knows
that after a war hit the quiet aspects of life it takes on the noisy. The second section
shows how the drums are so loud they can be heard through large cities, "Over the traffic
of cities- over the rumble of wheels in the streets;" this shows how the war has evolved
to something that not only disrupts churches and schools but something that disrupts
whole cities. The speaker then uses good images of jobs in the big city to further his
notion that that war is taking over all aspects of the common people's lives. "Would the
talkers be talking? Would a singer attempt to sing? / Would the lawyer rise in court to
state his case before the judge?" Whitman uses a sense of sarcasm in these two lines. He
is stating would these people continue on with their lives even though they have this
terrible feeling disrupting their day. The speaker finishes off the second section with
the drums and bugles getting louder and heavier, "then rattle quicker, heavier drums-you
bugles wilder blow." 
In the third section, Whitman gets into the feelings of the drums and the drive behind
the war. The next few lines indicate:
"Make no parley -- stop for no expostulation,
Mind not the timid -- mind not the weeper or prayer,
Mind not the old man beseeching the young man,
Let not the child's voice be heard, nor the mother's entreaties,"
Whitman uses a sense of sarcasm in these four lines. Make no "parley" or truces and keep
fighting even if you are ruining everyday life. Whitman is trying to express the fact
that the war has no desire to stop and will keep on going until it has to. Who cares
about the "timid" or the weak, who cares if people are in "prayer" to stop the war; the
war will keep going and people will have to keep their lives on hold. Whitman uses an
"old" man and a "young" man to show that the war takes on all kinds of people and affects
every age group. Whitman uses a great amount of sarcasm in the line: "Let not the child's
voice be heard, nor the mother's entreaties," he tries to get the point across that the
drums will stop for no one and the war will keep going until its resolved. 
Whitman uses wonderful imagery to show the cold terrors of war. This poem "Beat! Beat!
Drums" is a poem to show the horrible effects of war. War not only has negative effects
on the common people but negative effects on the future.

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