Poetry - 2024 poems Flashcards
CONTEXT
From ‘The Prelude’
- 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
FORM
From ‘The Prelude’
- 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
STRUCTURE
From ‘The Prelude’
- 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
LANGUAGE
From ‘The Prelude’
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
LANGUAGE 2
From ‘The Prelude’
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
CONTEXT
The Destruction of Sennacherib
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
FORM
The Destruction of Sennacherib
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)
STRUCTURE
The Destruction of Sennacherib
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
LANGUAGE
The Destruction of Sennacherib
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
FORM 2
The Destruction of Sennacherib
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
CONTEXT
The Man he Killed
- 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
FORM
The Man he Killed
- 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
STRUCTURE
The Man he Killed
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
LANGUAGE
The Man he Killed
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
STRUCTURE 2
The Man he Killed
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