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Refugee Blues-W. H. Auden.

The following analysis has been done in answer to a request sent by Amanthi. I hope you find
it satisfactory and that this helps with preparing for your exams.
Audens Refugee Blues laments the plight of the Jews who were forced to flee Europe when
the Holocaust started and they were rounded up and killed or imprisoned under the cruel
regime of Hitler.
The poem starts with a narrator, who is later revealed to be a German Jew, describing a large
city which is home to ten million people some of whom are well off and live in luxurious
large houses while others make do in slums and shabby houses. Yet, the narrator tells the
person with him, presumably a woman, that there is no place for them there. He remembers
that they once had a country long ago, speaking of Palestine, and they thought the world of it.
But now their own country is so distant to them that to see it they have to browse through an
atlas and he knows that they cant go there either.
The narrator then remarks on how every spring the flowers grow anew on the old tree that
grows in the village churchyard, and mourns to his companion that old passports cant renew
themselves, remembering how the country where they wanted to go had rejected them saying
that they were as good as dead if they didnt have updated passports. It seems that it is their
misfortune that they are still among the living, considering his dejected tone as he addresses
his companion. He remembers how when he had gone to the people who had been made
responsible for providing the war refugees homes, they had been polite to him, yet hadnt
been able to help him, having their hands tied because of the politics and had told him to
return next year. Recalling a public meeting that he had attended, he remembers that a person
had accused them of trying to steal away the livelihood of the occupants of the city by
barging in, and informs his companion that that man had been talking of them.
He thinks that he heard the rumbling of an imminent storm, but it turned out to be Hitler
sentencing them all to death. He sees a dog securely wrapped in a warm jacket, and a cat get
inside a car, the door of which had been held open for it and thinks that they are lucky that
they arent German Jews. He notices the fish swimming freely in the water at the harbor and
the birds flying wherever they want in the skies when he goes to the woods and marvels at
them not having any politicians and wars as they were not human beings.
He then tells his companion that he had had a dream in which he saw a magnificent building
which could accommodate a thousand people yet there was no place for them in it anywhere.
He remembers how when he stood on the plains and looked through the falling snow, he
could see a thousand soldiers marching towards them, looking for them, to put them away, to
kill them.
The language used in the poem is as simple as the message behind it is complex. Auden uses
the refrain at the end of each stanza, customary for a blues song, each a dejected realization in
its own by the narrator of his and every other refugee sorry plight. Hitlers command for all
Jews to be killed is personified as the rumbling of thunder which can be heard just before
lightning strikes and the world descends into the chaos of a political storm. Simple analogies
have been used such as that of the birds and fish flying and swimming freely and pets being
treated better than the Jews have been used to convey the low position these rejected people,
in terms that they understand.
Conveying the utter lost and pathetic state of the German Jewish refugees who had been
forced to leave their homes and find sanctuary in other countries. For a few years these

people had been welcomed into other countries and given meager yet sustainable jobs and
accommodations. But then as war threatened to break out and Hitlers word became law in
Germany, these people were no longer allowed entry into other countries, and were
persecuted in their own. They were called sub-humans, a term which Auden explores by
making the narrator realize that the animals he sees are treated better than them because they
arent German Jews. The sense of being hunted, of being sought out, persecuted is apparent
throughout the poem, as one by one all the doors to a better future are shut on the narrators
face and it reaches its climax in the last stanza when the narrator witnesses the thousands of
people who are raging war against his people, imprisoning them and killing them. The
inhumanity with which Jews were treated during those times and the Holocaust and its
terrible tales which few lived to tell are already well known today, but this poem highlights
what these people must have felt, when they had no place to call home, nowhere to go and no
one to turn to.
It is a chilling and depressing poem which reminds one of the extents to which humanity can
fall, becoming beasts, thirsty for each others blood and lives. Many poets have tried to
capture the anguish and cruelty of war, some have succeeded, but only a handful have
mastered it to the extent that there words are forever reminders to mankind; reminders which,
with the increasing religious intolerance and biased prejudices have become all the more
important in todays world.

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