The Garden of Love
The Garden of Love
The Garden of Love
TONE/MOOD DICTION
Mood: despairing/powerless/angry • The garden of love - The dominant image evokes two gardens in the
Tone: disappointment/disapproval/dismay/simmering anger Old Testament. Firstly, it evokes the Garden of Eden before the Fall of
• The REPETITION of ‘And’ is an indication of the speaker’s description of humankind. When Adam and Eve were in the garden, they were able
the changes and how these changes evoke unpleasant feelings in him. to love without shame and self-consciousness. It was a place,
therefore, of innocent, uninhibited sexual expression. The state of the
garden discovered by the speaker is therefore akin to Eden after the
Fall, when sexuality is surrounded by shame, repression and
prohibitions.
• In this poem, the speaker describes revisiting a place he remembers
from his childhood, only to find that it has been taken over by a
chapel or church. He is prevented from entering so he attempts to
explore the surrounding garden instead. Here he finds that the place
which used to be full of ‘sweet flowers’ (line 8) has been filled with
graves and tombstones instead. In addition, patrolling priests, in their
dark robes, prevent him from experiencing or reliving his ‘joys and
desires’ (line 12).
• This poem could be interpreted in different ways. On one level it is
simply a mark of the passage of time, and that as a result of human
expansion, an open area of his childhood no longer exists. While this
is cause for dismay for the speaker, it is surely not particularly
surprising.
• However, the fact that it is a religious building that has usurped this
land could imply a broader comment on organised religion and its
influence on ‘innocent’ pleasures and freedom.