Abstract
In
this essay, the aim of the writer is to analyze the poem entitled “Having A
Coke With You” by Frank O’Hara. The aspects the writer is trying to identify is
the use of figurative language and imagery in the poem. The writer uses
intrinsic theories and close-reading method. In this poem, Frank O’Hara uses
kinesthetic and visual imageries and simile to enhance the meaning of the poem.
CHAPTER
1
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of The Study
Literature
has many forms, such as novel, short story, or play. One of the most major
literary works is a poetry. Poetry is a way of telling something in a beautiful
way. It is used by people to express their thoughts and feelings. Its words
bring an emotional or sensual response.
Poetry
came from the Greek word poises, which means making. Poetry says more intensely
than ordinary language. Therefore, provisional understanding is needed to get
the message that the poem carries. As a part of literature, Poetry communicates
significant experience to allow us live more deeply with our imagination.
Poetry’s primary concern is with experience. (Arp and Johnson, 2005:4)
Poetry can be old, hard to understand, and
we live with the fact that some people out there think that poetry is dry and dusty stuff. Moreover, it
often makes heavy use of imagery and word association to quickly convey
emotions. There
are a lot of famous poetries, such as ‘Romeo and Juliet’ by Shakespeare, ‘Nothing
Gold Can Stay’ by Robert Frost, ‘I felt a Funeral, in my Brain’ by Emily
Dickinson, and etc, yet the writers here choose ‘Having a Coke with You’ by
Frank O’Hara to be the subject to this paper, as it will be a refreshing
change. O'Hara sought to capture the rhythms and flow of spoken speech in his
writing, as if you were sitting down to have a coke with your best friend. And
like an ice-cold drink on a hot summer's day, this poem will set one’s skin
tingling with its sweet, conversational tone. No "thee's" and
"thou's" here. One do not need a Ph.D. to understand what O'Hara is
driving at, but that does not mean that he is just pouring empty calories into
your head. More than just babbling, he has got something to say about art, but
most of all about love. This is one of the reasons why the writers decide to
discuss about it.
1.2 Purpose of The Study
Based
on the background of the study of the paper, the purpose of the study is to
analyze the poetry by its intrinsic aspect
such as imagery and simile
in Frank O’Hara’s ‘Having a Coke with You’. The discussion through those intrinsic elements of poetry is hoped to help the reader to understand more about the poetry—not
just reading
it without knowing its aspects.
1.3 Scope of The Study
Based
on the title, the discussion in this paper is to
explain about the intrinsic aspects of the poetry, which
are imagery and simile. There are seven types of imagery, yet the writers will explain only two of
them; they are Visual and Kinesthetic Imagery, according to the most imagery
that is used by Frank O’Hara on ‘Having a Coke with You’.
CHAPTER 2
THE POET, THE
POEM, AND THE TRANSLATION
2.1 THE POET
Frank O’Hara
On
March 27, 1926, Frank (Francis Russell) O’Hara was born in Maryland. He grew up
in Massachusetts, and later studied piano at the New England Conservatory in
Boston from 1941 to 1944. O’Hara then served in the South Pacific and Japan as
a sonarman on the destroyer USS Nicholas during World War II.
Following
the war, O’Hara studied at Harvard College, where he majored in music and
worked on compositions and was deeply influenced by contemporary music, his
first love, as well as visual art. He also wrote poetry at that time and read
the work of Arthur Rimbaud, Stéphane Mallarmé, Boris Pasternak, and Vladimir
Mayakovsky.
While
at Harvard, O’Hara met John Ashbery and soon began publishing poems in the
Harvard Advocate. Despite his love for music, O’Hara changed his major and left
Harvard in 1950 with a degree in English. He then attended graduate school at
the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and received his MA in 1951. That
autumn, O’Hara moved into an apartment in New York. He was soon employed at the
front desk of the Museum of Modern Art and began to write seriously.
O’Hara’s
early work was considered both provocative and provoking. O’Hara became one of
the most distinguished members of the New York School of poets, and became a source of
inspiration for his highly original poetry. He attempted to produce with words
the effects these artists had created on canvas. In certain instances, he
collaborated with the painters to make “poem-paintings," paintings with
word texts.
O’Hara
continued working at the Museum of Modern Art throughout his life, curating
exhibitions and writing introductions and catalogs for exhibits and tours. On
July 25, 1966, while vacationing on Fire Island.
Frank
O’Hara was killed in a sand buggy accident. He was forty years old. (https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/frank-ohara)
2.2 THE POEM
Having a Coke with You
Is even more fun than going to San Sebastian, Irún,
Hendaye, Biarritz, Bayonne
Or being sick to my stomach on the Travesera de Gracia in
Barcelona
Partly because in your orange shirt you look like a better happier St. Sebastian
Partly because of my love for you, partly because of your
love for yoghurt
Partly because of the fluorescent orange tulips around
the birches
Partly because of the secrecy our smiles take on before
people and statuary
It is hard to believe when
I’m with you that there can be anything as still
As solemn as unpleasantly
definitive as statuary when right in front of it
In the warm New York 4 o’clock light we are drifting back
and forth
Between each other like
a tree breathing through its spectacles
And the portrait show seems
to have no faces in it at all, just paint
You suddenly wonder why in the world anyone ever did them
I look
At you and I would rather look at you than all the
portraits in the world
Except possibly for the Polish Rider occasionally and
anyway it’s in the Frick
Which thank heavens you haven’t gone to yet so we can go
together the first time
And the fact that you move so beautifully more or less
takes care of Futurism
Just as at home I never think of the Nude Descending a
Staircase or
At a rehearsal a single drawing of Leonardo or Michelangelo
that used to wow me
And what good does all the research of the Impressionists
do them
When they never got the right person to stand near the
tree when the sun sank
Or for that matter Marino Marini when he didn’t pick the
rider as carefully
As the horse
It seems they were all cheated of some marvelous experience
Which is not going to go wasted on me which is why I am
telling you about it
2.3 THE TRANSLATION
Minum Soda Bersamamu
Lebih menyenangkan daripada
pergi ke San
Sebastian, Irún, Hendaye, Biarritz, Bayonne
Atau sakit perut di atas Travesera de Gracia di Barcelona
Sebagian karena kau terlihat
seperti St.
Sebastian yang lebih baik dan lebih
bahagia dengan kaus jinggamu
Sebagian karena cintaku
kepadamu, sebagian karena cintamu kepada yoghurt
Sebagian karena tulip jingga
yang berpendar melingkari pohon birch
Sebagian karena rahasia yang
diambil senyum kita dari orang-orang dan patung-patung
Ketika aku bersamamu, sulit
untuk percaya bahwa ada hal lain sediam
Se-khidmat, sepasti
patung-patung itu ketika tepat di depannya
Di bawah cahaya hangat New York pukul 4 kita hanyut berkali-kali
Antara satu sama lain seperti
sebuah pohon bernafas melalui kacamatanya
Dan pertunjukan lukisan itu
seperti tak memiliki wajah sama sekali, hanya cat
Tiba-tiba kau bertanya-tanya
mengapa ada yang membuatnya
Aku menatap
Dirimu dan aku lebih memilih
untuk menatapmu daripada seluruh lukisan di dunia ini
Kecuali mungkin kadang lukisan Polish Rider di galeri Frick
Yang untungnya belum pernah kau
kunjungi jadi kita bisa pergi ke sana bersama
Dan kenyataan bahwa kau
bergerak begitu indah, kurang lebih menutupi Futurisme
Seperti ketika di rumah aku tak
pernah memikirkan Nude Descending a Staircase atau
Saat aku berlatih sebuah gambar
Leonardo atau Michaelangelo yang dulu membuatku takjub
Dan apa gunanya semua
penelitian yang dilakukan para Impersionis
Jika mereka tidak mempunyai
orang yang tepat untuk berdiri disamping pohon ketika matahari terbenam
Atau dalam hal ini, Mario Marini ketika ia tak memilih penunggang kuda
sehati-hati ia memilih kudanya
Sepertinya mereka semua
dicurangi oleh sebuah pengalaman yang luar biasa
Yang tak akan aku sia-siakan,
maka dari itu aku memberitahukannya kepadamu.
CHAPTER 3
LITERARY REVIEW
3.1 Imagery
Imagery is a way
to represent objects, actions, and ideas in such a way that it appeals to human
senses to deepen the reader’s understanding of the work. The function of imagery in
literature is to generate a vibrant and graphic presentation of a scene that
appeals to as many of the reader’s senses as possible. It aids the reader’s
imagination to envision the characters and scenes in the literary piece
clearly. There
are seven distinct types of imagery: visual, auditory, olfactory, gustatory,
tactile, kinesthetic and organic. Many of these deal with the five senses,
which all work together to help us create mental images of whatever we are
reading.
In this paper, not all imagery
will be explained due to the containt of the poem. Imagery, such as visual and
kinesthetic, that will be explained by the writer.
3.1.1
Visual Imagery
Visual imagery is an image that appears
from sense of sight, and plays the largest role in imagery in literature. It
describes what a scene or character looks like. Visual imagery may include:
-
Color, such as: burnt red, bright orange, dull yellow,
verdant green, and Robin’s egg blue.
-
Shapes, such as: square, circular, tubular, rectangular,
and conical.
-
Size, such as: miniscule, tiny, small, medium-sized,
large, and gigantic.
-
Pattern, such as: polka-dotted, striped, zig-zagged,
jagged, and straight.
-
For example:
a.
The gray sea and the
long black land
(Meeting
at Night by Robert Browning)
b.
Two roads diverged in a
yellow wood
(The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost)
c.
But I send you a cream-white rosebud
(A White Rose by John Boyle O’Reilly)
3.1.2
Kinesthetic Imagery
Kinesthetic Imagery is a poetic device that gives a feeling
of natural or physical bodily movement or action (like a heartbeat, a pulse and
breathing). It also refers to tension along with the movement.
Kinesthetic imagery is further divided into various
categories:
-
Touch: Like running fingers on silk fabric
-
Physical movement: Gives feelings of involvement in
an activity, like walking on grass
-
Temperature: For example, it might involve sunlight
falling over the body
-
Feelings: Internal feelings like being angry, sad,
happy, peaceful and calm.
For example:
-
Tossing their heads in
sprightly danceaa
(Daffodils by W. Wordsworth)
-
With a wild rattle and clatter, and an inhuman abandonment of
consideration not easy to be understood in these days, the carriage dashed
through streets and swept round corners, with women screaming before it, and
men clutching each other and clutching children out of its way.
(A Tale of Two Cities by Charles
Dickens)
3.2 Simile
Simile is figure of speech that makes a
comparison, showing similarities between two things. Using similes attracts the
attention and appeals directly to the senses of listeners or readers
encouraging their imagination to comprehend what is being communicated. Simile allows
readers to relate the feelings of a writer or a poet to their personal
experiences. Therefore, the use of similes makes it easier for the readers to
understand the subject matter of a literary text, which may have been otherwise
too demanding to be comprehended.
For example:
“O
my Luve’s like a red, red rose
That’s
newly sprung in June;
O
my Luve’s like the melodie
That’s
sweetly played in tune.”
(A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns)
“I
wandered lonely as a cloud
That
floats on high o’er vales and hills.”
(Daffodils by W.Wordsworth)
CHAPTER 4
DISCUSSION
(Line 1) Is even more fun than
going to San Sebastian, Irún, Hendaye, Biarritz, Bayonne.
The poem's title, ‘Having a Coke with You’ really
functions as its first line. When a line of poetry breaks off mid-thought, but
is then picked up again on the following line, it's called an enjambment. This
second part of this enjambment tells us just how fun having a coke with you
(whoever you are) is for the speaker. It's more fun than a trip to Europe.
Furthermore, In this line of the poem, Frank O’Hara uses kinesthetic imagery–it
can be seen from the words ‘more fun’ that represents his internal feelings.
(Line 2) Or being sick to my
stomach on the Travesera de Gracia in Barcelona.
For some reason, he's sick to his stomach, is a physical
pain and is also the feeling, so this line is a kinesthetic imagery. Even one
were sick to his stomach, strolling down the street in beautiful Barcelona
would still be a hoot. One could probably tell all his friends when you get
back from vacation about the time one ate too many Spanish sardines and got
sick. It'd be a great story, and one would still be more fun than even that.
(Line 3) Partly because in your
orange shirt you look like a better happier St. Sebastian.
In this line, there are two aspects; visual imagery and
simile. ‘Partly because in your orange shirt...’ here shows a visual imagery as
it shows the colour of his lover’s shirt,. while ‘you look like a better
happier St. Sebastian’ is a simile. he speaker tells us that you look like a
‘better happier’ version of St. Sebastian. This simile makes more sense with
this biography note: St. Sebastian was a Roman soldier, but also an early
Christian who, for his beliefs, was tied to a tree by fellow Romans and shot
full of arrows. Somehow, he survived that, continued to be a Christian, and so
was later beaten to death. He's known as both the patron saint both of athletes
and soldiers.
(Line 5) Partly because of the
fluorescent orange tulips around the birches.
In this line O’Hara uses visual imagery because Frank
O’Hara uses word ‘fluorescent orange tulips’. Her is appreciating the powerful
beauty of the flowers around the birch trees. They practically glow (are
"fluorescent") with energy and color.
(Line 6) Partly because of the
secrecy our smiles take on before people and statuary.
This line uses kinesthetic imagery as there is physical
movement here that is showed by the word ‘take on’. It is important to note
that these smiles ‘take on’ the secrecy ‘before people and statuary’. It is
only in the presence of other folks, or other statues of folks, that these two
can exchange these looks–that makes sense. There is a special privacy about
being in love that only the two of you can share. The more you're around other
people, or things for that matter, the more private and special you can feel
about your relationship.
(Line 7) it is hard to believe
when I'm with you that there can be anything as still.
In this line, the speaker continues his thought about
being with you among statues by using a simile by using the word ‘the can be
anything as still’. Specifically, the speaker’s expressing disbelief that
anything can be as still as statues. It is important though that this thought
occurs to the speaker only when he's with his lover. It seems like the rest of
the world is all in motion.
(Line 8) as solemn
as unpleasantly definitive as statuary when right in front of it.
This line picks up the thought of the previous one, with
some fancy enjambment and a simile. Statues, in one’s company, are not just
still, they are also "solemn" (serious) and "unpleasantly
definitive" (or too, well, defined). In other words, they just stand there, doing nothing but being logical
and straightforward. For some reason, this really bugs our speaker when he is
around his lover, it must be that his lover has the opposite effect on him.
(Line 9) in the warm New York 4
o'clock light we are drifting back and forth.
This is actually a metaphor, yet it is a kinesthetic
imagery as well, as it shows us a physical movement. It seems like the feeling
the speaker get when in love, the kind of feeling where he is just so happy it
is as if his feet does not even touch the ground.
(Line 10) between each other
like a tree breathing through its spectacles
This line is a simile. It seems that we recall as the
readers from junior high life science that trees absorb carbon dioxide and give
off oxygen through their leaves. So, if trees ‘breathe’ through their leaves,
how can leaves be like spectacles? And what do late-afternoon leaves and
glasses have in common? Basically, they both are shiny and reflective when the
sun catches them. It may seem to the speaker that the trees are wearing glasses
as their leaves flash in the sun.
(Line 11) and the portrait show
seems to have no faces in it at all, just paint.
This line is also a simile, the speaker uses the word
‘seems to have no faces’. From statues, the speaker turns to portraits.
Remember that a portrait is a just a painting of someone's picture. It is like
history's instagram. Only, for our speaker, a show of these kind of paintings
is just not doing it for him. He doesn't even recognize the people in the
portraits. To him, it's ‘just paint’. Just as statues, it does not stack up to
the flow he feels from love, and now portraits seem even worse. The speaker
keeps comparing his love to art, and art keeps coming up the big loser. It just
cannot quite capture the awesomeness that is real life, in this case, the person the poem is written for.
(Line
13 and 14) I
look
At you and I would rather look at you than all the
portraits in the world
These two lines contain visual imagery
as the writer uses “look”. He's looked at statues, at portraits, at the “warm
New York light,” and at “you”. Looking seems to be the primary way he accesses
the world around him. “You” are the writer’s favorite things to look at,
compared to “all the portraits in the world”.
(Line 15 and 16) Except possibly for the Polish
Rider occasionally and anyway it’s in the Frick
Which thank heavens you haven’t
gone to yet so we can go together the first time
In this line, the writer uses
kinesthetic imagery, pointing at the Frick Gallery in New York. The portrait in question is
"The Polish Rider," painted by Rembrandt, some time in the 1650s. He tells us this as kind of an aside, by
saying "anyway." That word "anyway," is something someone
might say to someone in conversation. It's a verbal kind of tic, not something
that one would expect to read in a proper poem.
The writer has just said that the object of his affections has never
been to the Frick. That
is so exciting for him because it gives him the chance to enjoy another special, memorable moment with
"you."
(Line 17) And the fact that you move so
beautifully more or less takes care of Futurism
In this line,
the writer uses kinesthetic imagery with the word “move”. Futurism was a school of art that
emphasized motion, excitement, speed, and energy. It was all about capturing
movement Still, “you” move so
beautifully
that nothing produced by a futurist artist can compare.
(Line
22 and 23) Or
for that matter Marino Marini when he didn’t pick the rider as carefully
As the horse
With this line, the speaker uses
kinesthetic imagery as well, by telling us that Mario Marini, who was a
sculptor who created several versions of people riding horses, wasted his
time because he did not pick the right people to ride the horses.
(Line 24) It seems they were all cheated
of some marvelous experience
The key word for us in this line is
"they." As we near the end of the poem, the speaker now looks back on
all the artists that he's run down for, essentially, missing the point with
their artwork. It seems that none of the artists, as beautiful and as
breathtaking as their work might be, can come close to the actual experience of
being in love. He is aware of this marvelous experience. In fact, he's
experiencing it right now.
(Line 25) Which is not going to go wasted on me which is why I am telling you about
it
So that's what he wants you
know. Such a marvelous experience (in this
case, being in love) can go wasted on an artist (as opposed to our speaker).
Maybe it's because they are too busy expressing or representing life
to actually appreciate it as it happens. . Which is why he
wrote the poe, which is a kind of art. So we have a work of art that wants to truly
celebrate life and lament the way that other art can't do the same thing.
CHAPTER 5
CONCLUSION
As the final points that could be present
in this chapter are; there are two kinds of imagery found in Frank O’Hara’s
poem, namely visual (describing
what a scene or character looks like) and kinesthetic (giving a feeling of natural or physical bodily
movement or action).
The meaning of each imagery that found is different between one another; it
depends on what it is or what the real aim of each imagery.
Furthermore, Frank O’Hara use
simile to represent his feelings. He keeps comparing his love to art, and art
keeps coming up the big loser. It just cannot quite capture the awesomeness
that is real life.
good job, but you should write your references add link for you writing.
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