Poetry - 2024 poems Flashcards

1
Q

CONTEXT

From ‘The Prelude’

A
  • romantic movement - focused on nature, intense emotions, wanting ppl to understand emotions better, use of everyday language
  • Wordsworth - both parents died in adolescence, split up from siblings, his mother’s relatives mistreated him to the extent of consideration of suicide, spent a lot of time outside to escape his problems, attemping to warn contemporary society as ppl move into factories
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2
Q

FORM

From ‘The Prelude’

A
  • blank verse - makes it sound serious & important, mimicking the end and change in tone ‘And serious mood’
  • regular rhythm - makes it sound like speech = more accesible, however can somewhat downplay what happened
  • first-person - makes it feel more personal, making readers feel more connected, attempting to enlighten them in what happened
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3
Q

STRUCTURE

From ‘The Prelude’

A
  • epic poem - intended to be an epic, epics usually have a hero: in this case it may be Wordsworth - the adventure is growing up and spiritual growth and a young boy experiences this - or it is nature itself - ‘with purpose of its own’ calm, controlled has something to do and a reason to exist -
  • single stanza - emphasises overwhelming power of nature bc no breaks given no time to regain breath and overwhelms readers w/ intensity: nature’s power
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4
Q

LANGUAGE

From ‘The Prelude’

A

personifcation of nature - ‘led by her’:
* idea of mother nature
* pronoun ‘her’ = feminity, trad associated with creation, growth, emotional love, which teaches reader that it is nature sustains life and has loving power over us all
* speaker may not be in control of his actions, as it nature that controls him, showing superiority of nature and lifting blame of what happens from speaker

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5
Q

LANGUAGE 2

From ‘The Prelude’

A

similies - ‘like a swan’, ‘like a living thing’:
* trying to share knowledge gained from nature and nature’s power
* warning society against contributing to industrial revolution

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6
Q

CONTEXT

The Destruction of Sennacherib

A

sympathetic views upon the jewish:
* exploration upon the conflict against Jews & how they’re oppressed
* this poem shows how despite their hardships, God will protect them in the end

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7
Q

FORM

The Destruction of Sennacherib

A

anapestic tetrameter ‘And the sheen of their spears were like stars on the sea’:
* significantly increases the pace in an attempt to make readers focus on what the Angle of Death has done rather than what has happened with the dead Christian soldiers
* mimics a horse’s hooves, creating a war-like atmosphere = more personal for readers = presents a fearful reality of a war = puts readers on edge = making them celebrate or feel relieved once God wins (suspense)

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8
Q

STRUCTURE

The Destruction of Sennacherib

A

extended metaphor:
* stanza 1 - assyrian army are a ‘blue wave’ - waves have connotations of power, destruction & sense of being unstoppable
* stanza 4 - deaths of horses ‘cold spray’ & ‘rock beating surf’ - cold spray = weak, pathetic, mildly noticeable = God is ulitmately the most powerful, magnitudes greater than a ‘wave’ = readers must respect him and not doubt his power = more devout readers

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9
Q

LANGUAGE

The Destruction of Sennacherib

A

alliteration:
* sibilance in stanza 1 - ‘spears like stars on the sea’ - sinister + elevates the assryians as a threat to be aware of, it also emphasises ‘stars on the sea’ presenting Sennacherib as smth which holds great power, so great it controls the elements
* ‘hearts once heaved’ helps make the idea of a final death, the ‘h’ noise forces readers to pause and relfect on the etxten of what has occured, phrase followed by caesura which adds to this

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10
Q

FORM 2

The Destruction of Sennacherib

A

themes - death:
* 1st interpretation: Byron overshadows that of what has happened w/ the glory for the Jews –> would fit into his ideas of religion and his personal views ==> this is done thru a rhyme scheme and meter which makes readers not think too much abt the death
* 2nd interpretation: the poem is a metaphor for war as the glory for Jews overshadows those who have lost (often found irl) = the widows of the army ‘wail’, a stark and emotional contrast between silence beforehand + ‘distorted and pale’ rider

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11
Q

CONTEXT

The Man he Killed

A
  • boer war - colonised sa against uk, uk destroyed civilian areas
  • hardy - disliked boer war & politics & politicians of the time, used to be lower class, succesful novelist
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12
Q

FORM

The Man he Killed

A
  • first person - more personal, makes readers feel connected, heightens emotions, creates more sympathy - ‘he and I’
  • conversation-like - sounds like a story being told in a pub, idea of pub seems homely while discussing smth so brutal = contrast = emphasis on brutality/senselessness of war
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13
Q

STRUCTURE

The Man he Killed

A

ABAB rhyme scheme - ‘met, inn, wet, nipperkin’:
* mimics nursery rhyme - disturbing contrast between ABAB & violent content of poem
* metaphor for how war is presented - politicians & patriotism may be trying to sugarcoat the brutality of war
* metaphor for politicians in war - to many politicians may be more like playing rather than risking human lives

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14
Q

LANGUAGE

The Man he Killed

A

repition of the word because: ‘I shot him dead because – Because’:
* speaker stutters here - v noticeable as poetry is often elegant with words
* suggests an inability to find a reason as to why he has shot this person dead
also repeats ‘Because he was my foe, Just so: my foe’
* also signals that the only reason he shot him because he was the enemy
* he is repeating it to himself in order to console and justify it

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15
Q

STRUCTURE 2

The Man he Killed

A

cyclical structure - starts in pub, ends in pub:
* destructive cycle of war - no answer to speakers moral dilemmas
* conflict has no end goal - and is therefore pointless - will forever be trapped in a loop

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16
Q

CONTEXT

The Charge of the Light Brigade

A
  • poet laureate - had to glorify war & british government’s desicions to british public & defend upper-class
  • crimean war - uk, france, ottoman empire vs russia, light brigade usually had lower-class ppl w/ light armour
17
Q

FORM

The Charge of the Light Brigade

A

dactylic dimeter - ‘Half a league, half a league’:
* imitates horses running
* soldiers have no choice but to run into battle as this meter sounds v unrelenting - noble, desperate, heightened emotions

18
Q

STRUCTURE

The Charge of the Light Brigade

A

irregular rhyme scheme & rhyming couplets - ‘shell & well’:
* irregularity creates a sense of chaos
* couplets creates a sense of inevability

19
Q

LANGUAGE

The Charge of the Light Brigade

A

symbolism - ‘valley of death’:
* references bible psalm 23 - person goes into valley of death however is aware god will protect them - v ironic/dramatic irony
* subtle criticisim of how upper class made lower class engage in doomed conflict bc they had a lower social status
* symbolises inevitability of what will happen (can combo w/ rhymin couplets)

20
Q

CONTEXT

The Class Game

A
  • casey was housewife from liverpool
  • post-war uk was still divided by class
  • magazine published in only published poets who were working class
21
Q

FORM

The Class Game

A

first person + direct address:
* dramatic monologue - emotional, personal
* direct address - gets readers to reconsider their views on class
* no clear stanzas - like an angry rant

22
Q

STRUCTURE

The Class Game

A

rhyming couplets, ‘way’ & ‘day’:
* simple rhyme scheme - reflects simple way of life of working class + lightheartedness of being a ‘game’
* half rhyme occasionally used - stereotype view of working class being ‘half’ as intelligent etc
* regular beat - argument sounding

23
Q

LANGUAGE

The Class Game

A

contrasting language, ‘not like’ & ‘instead’:
* shows 2 diff ways of life
* highlights how diff middle class vs speakers class
directly contrasting phrases, ‘stained with toils’ vs ‘soft-lily white’:
* urban vs suburban life
* emphasis to catch attention