English Literature Poetry



English Literature Poetry - Revision Crib sheets

Half Caste

Poet: John Agard – born in Guyana in 1949 and came to Britain in 1977. His mother was white Portuguese and his father was black.

Main Ideas: Agard is angry about the term “Half-caste” and about people who label you because of your skin colour etc.

Tone: The tone is angry but the poem is also presented in a humorous way.

Methods:

• Agard writes in Afro-Caribbean dialect to reflect his culture and because it is a performance poem.

• He also uses non-standard punctuation – to show we do not all have to conform to ‘the norm’.

• Use of assonance (e.g. “ah rass”, “de sun pass” reflects his anger.)

• He uses humorous comparisons like “half-caste weather”, “half-caste symphony” and “half-caste canvas” to show how ridiculous the term half-caste is.

• The poem is full of contrasts – e.g. “light” and “shadow” and “half” and “whole”

Parade’s End

Poet: Daljit Nagra - was born in 1966 and brought up in West London and Sheffield. He is a second generation Indian.

Main Ideas: The poem shows an Indian family who own a local community supermarket in Yorkshire and who experience racial abuse from members of the community. The poem suggests some jealousy of the family and also suggest that they will never fully feel accepted in the community.

Tone: The tone is one of tension and anxiety.

Methods:

• The poet creates a menacing atmosphere with words and phrases that show how the family feel unsafe, e.g. “Bolted two metal bars”, “darkened aisles”, “shutters”, “getaway”

• He creates contrasts in the poem between poverty and wealth and gold and brown.

• It is a very visual poem with detailed description of things like the kidneys and the shopping trolleys.

• He uses a metaphor of the car sprayed gold with brown beneath to suggest that they cannot fit in.

• Use of Yorkshire dialect reinforces the difference between “them” and “us”

Belfast Confetti

Poet: Ciaron Carson – Irish poet and translator

Main Ideas: The poem describes the explosion of an IRA bomb and the panic and chaos that followed. The narrator appears to be right in the middle of it and cannot escape.

Tone: The tone is one of panic and confusion

Methods:

• The poet uses a metaphor of punctuation to represent the shrapnel from the bomb and to emphasise the confusion and panic.

• He uses ellipsis to show the panic goes on and on…

• Use of caesura emphasises that his way is blocked and he cannot escape.

• Use of questions highlight the confusion.

Our Sharpeville

Poet: Ingrid de Kok – born in South Africa in 1951.

Main ideas: The poem describes a young girl in South Africa during the time of Apartheid, who watches a lorry of black miners with fascination and interest. She is warned to come inside and told that the men are a threat to her. The poet wants to show the fear that was instilled in white children during the aftermath of the Sharpeville Massacre. The girl appears to begin to question this, aware that she is being lied to about the men.

Tone: The tone is one of secrecy and fear.

Methods:

• The poet uses language to suggests children’s stories and excitement

• There are references to the child’s age and innocence

• She uses a metaphor of a “stiff broom” to describe the Grandmother’s lie

• She uses a metaphor of “a pool of blood…” to describe the Sharpeville Massacre.

• She uses language to show secrecy and concealment.

Exposure

Poet: Wilfred Owen – English poet born in 1893 – officer in World war One – killed in action.

Main Ideas: In one of his many anti-war poems, Owen describes the harsh winter weather conditions that the soldiers faced in WW1 and how the weather was as deadly an enemy as the Germans. He feels as if everyone – even God, are leaving the men to die.

Tone: The tone is of hopelessness and despair.

Methods:

• The poet personifies the weather (wind and snow) throughout the poem

• He uses words to highlight the exhaustion of the men

• He uses similes to describe the wind and the gunfire

• Alliteration emphasises the harshness of the guns and the quantity of the snow

• Several other metaphors used

Catrin

Poet: Gillian Clarke – born in Cardiff in 1937

Main Ideas: The poet describes the conflict of birth when her daughter was born (i.e. the physical pain she felt, caused by her daughter being born). She then describes the conflict that exists between them when the daughter is a teenager; they are connected by the mother/child bond but the child wants her independence.

Tone: Pain in the first half and admiration and frustration in the second half.

Methods:

• The poet uses the metaphor of a red rope to represent the umbilical cord

• Past tense and repetition of “remember” show this is a memory

• She uses an oxymoron to show the contrasting emotions motherhood can bring.

• She uses a metaphor of a fish bowl to show the emotions they have experienced in their relationship

• She uses alliteration and rhyme to show the girl’s defiance.

Your Dad did What?

Poet: Sophie Hannah

Main ideas: The poem shows a teacher who misunderstands her pupil’s writing about his holidays. She assumes he is being lazy and refusing to write and grades his work with an ‘E’. the reader understand by the end of the poem that the boy’s father has just died and that one ‘e’ would make his sentence make sense.

Tone: The tone is of frustration as the teacher does not understand and jumps to the wrong conclusions.

Methods:

• Regular use of “they” suggests that the teacher is detached form her pupils

• Use of questions reflect the teacher’s anger

• Use of enjambement suggests she will not stop to work out the real problem.

• Repetition of the teacher’s words reinforces her frustration

The Class Game

The Poet: Mary Casey

Main Ideas: The narrator is angry at people who judge her because of her class and the way she speaks. The poem is a humorous look at class stereotyping. The narrator is proud of her class.

Tone: The tone is angry but positive at the end

Methods:

• The poem is written in Liverpudlian dialect to reflect the narrator’s working class roots

• Use of questions creates an accusatory tone

• There are lots of contrasting words to show the difference between the classes.

Cousin Kate

The Poet: Christina Rossetti – born 1830 - died 1894.

Main Ideas: The narrator of the poem explains how betrayed she has been by her cousin who has married a man who she was in a relationship with. The narrator would have been considered a “fallen woman” in the time the poem was set, as she has slept with a man outside of marriage and had a child as a result. The narrator compares herself as a “fallen woman” to her cousin who now has status in her marriage.

Tone: The tone is one of anger and betrayal

Methods:

• She uses repetition to stress her regret

• She uses a simile “like a glove” to show how to the man, she was disposable.

• Words used to show innocence and purity versus “fallen” and other contrasts

The Drum

The Poet: John Scott - Born 1731 – Died 1783

Main ideas: The narrator speaks out against the sound of the drum that accompanies soldiers to war. To him, the drum represents the lies that young men believe when they go to fight, that war will be glorious and fun. He then shows the reality and horror of war and says that this is what the drum makes him think of.

Tone: The tone is one of anger

Methods:

• Use of alliteration shows how quickly the men will die

• Repetition of first two lines reinforces his anger and adds to the regular rhythm and rhyme which reflects the steady beat of the drum

• Words are used to show the horror of war

• Repetition of “And” highlights how the list of horrors goes on and on.

Invasion

The poet: Choman Hardi

Main Ideas: The speaker is a Kurd awaiting an Iraqi invasion of his homeland. He shows the anticipation and fear as they wait and the difference between the invading army and their poor defense.

Tone: The tone is one of fear and hopelessness

Methods:

• Personal pronouns highlight the “them” and “us”

• Language is used to show the contrast between the two armies

• Alliteration emphasise the anger of the Kurds

• Language is used to show waste of life

Hitcher

The Poet: Simon Armitage - born in 1963 in Yorkshire - a British poet and novelist.

Main ideas: The narrator is not happy with his life and picks up a hitchhiker who appears to have all the freedom that he desires. The narrator commits an unprovoked violent attack on the hitchhiker and shows no remorse for his actions.

Tone: The tone is very casual and laid back.

Methods:

• Use of enjambement suggests that he is telling a personal anecdote which he is proud of.

• Three rhyming words in the first stanza emphasise his dissatisfaction

• Use of “I” suggests an egotistical narrator

• Narrator’s language is colloquial, reflecting his laid back attitude to what he has done

• Language associated with the hitchhiker is quite romantic to suggest his free life-style.

O What is that Sound?

The poet: W. H. Auden

Main Ideas: The poem is a ballad, telling the story of a married couple who observe the movements of an army as they approach their home. The wife asks questions as she feels uneasy and wants to know what the army is doing. The husband tries to reassure her that they are no threat but then at the last minute, runs off, leaving his wife to face an angry army. The reader assumes that the husband was a traitor to the army and now he is a traitor to his wife.

The Tone: The tone is one of unease

Methods:

• Use of regular rhyme, rhythm and repetition all reflect the idea of the army marching.

• Use of questions show the confusion and unease of the wife.

• Language of violence is shown to show the threat of the army

Conscientious Objector

The Poet: Edna St Vincent Millay – Born 1892 – Died 1950 – American Poet

Main ideas: The narrator describes Death as a person who she will not help in any way. She is anti-war and a pacifist who sees the only winner of war to be Death. She makes many promises of things that she will not do to help lead people to their deaths.

The Tone: The tone is defiant

Methods:

• Throughout the poem, the poet personifies Death.

• She uses language to show the violence of Death

• Onomatopoeia helps to bring Death to life

• Use of repetition show that war is everywhere

August 6, 1945

The Poet: Alison Fell = Born in Scotland in 1944 – poet and novelist

Main ideas: The narrator describes the pilot, Paul Tibetts as he flew the Enola Gay over Hiroshima and dropped an atomic bomb. The poem is very visual using much imagery to convey the horror of what he saw beneath him and to describe the nuclear mushroom cloud. We are told that the pilot will be left with nightmares.

The Tone: The tone is one of horror and loss

Methods:

• There are many similes and metaphors used to describe the mushroom cloud and the burnt skin of the civilians.

• Language is used to emphasise death (“dust” and “ash”)

• The poet may be referring to a children’s rhyme (Ladybird, ladybird…) which adds to the idea of innocent lives being lost.

Practice Exam Questions

For each question, make sure that you cover:

• The main ideas / what the poem is about (linked to the question)

• How the poet uses language and imagery to present his/her ideas

• How the poet uses structural methods and how he/she organises ideas

Individual Poem from the Anthology…

1. Explain how Agard uses language and form to put forward his point of view in “Half-Caste”

2. Explain how Nagra presents conflict in “Parade’s End”.

3. Explain how Carson presents conflict in “Belfast confetti”.

4. Explore how de Kok depicts conflict through the eyes of a child in the poem “Our Sharpeville”.

5. Explain how Wilfred Owen presents the horror of war in “Exposure”.

6. Explore how the conflict between a mother and daughter is shown in “Catrin”.

7. Explain how Hannah creates a sense of sadness in “Your dad did What?”.

8. Explore how effectively Casey has used vocabulary and poetic devices to portray differences in social class and her attitudes towards them.

9. Explain how Rossetti creates sympathy for the narrator in “Cousin Kate”.

10. Explain how Armitage presents conflict and violence in the poem “Hitcher”.

11. Explore how Scott uses negative language to convey his attitude towards war.

12. Explore how Auden builds tension, explores repercussions and expresses emotions connected with war.

13. Explore how St.Vincent Millay uses personification of Death within the poem to help convey the persona’s stance as a conscientious objector.

14. Explain how fell uses imagery, vocabulary and form to convey the horror of a nuclear attack.

15. Explain how Hardi uses vocabulary and verb tense to create an ominous sense of impending conflict in “Invasion”.

Comparison Question…

Take each of the above questions and add: and compare this to how another poet presents ideas about…. (whatever the question focussed on.)

E.g. Explain how Wilfred Owen presents the horror of war in “Exposure” and compare this to how another poet presents ideas about the horror of war.

E.g. Explain how Carson presents conflict in “Belfast confetti” and compare this to how another poet presents ideas about conflict.

Poetic devices - Glossary

Alliteration – Words close to each other that begin with the same letter or sound

Assonance – repetition of vowel sounds

Ballad – A poem that tells a story

Caesura – a break or pause in a line of poetry, marked with a piece of punctuation like full stop, colon, semi-colon, exclamation mark, question mark.

Dialect – A form of language particular to regional area or group of people

Enjambment – The running on of one line of poetry into the next without punctuation

Imagery – Any description that appeals to the reader’s senses – especially created using similes, metaphors and personification

Lexical field – A group of words that link in theme. E.g. words suggesting violence

Metaphor – A figure of speech that tells you that one thing is something else. E.g. He was a monster.

Onomatopoeia – Words that sound like what they describe. E.g. “the hiss of a snake”

Personification – Giving human characteristics to non-living things. E.g. the trees waved their branches furiously.

Repetition – Repeating ideas or actual words or phrases

Rhyme – use of words which have the same sound or which end with the same sound.

Rhythm – Pattern or flow of sound created by the arrangement of stressed and unstressed syllables.

Simile – Uses the words “as” or “like” to compare two things. E.g. “As cold as ice”

Stanza – The separate units of verse within a poem

Structure – The way the poet has organised her ideas (line length, stanza length, enjambment, caesura, punctuation, rhyme, rhythm, development of ideas)

Tone – the feeling or mood that the writer creates

Remember…

When you identify a method, always quote the example and always explain the effect of the quote on the reader.

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download