Poems!
- Created by: OverratedLemons
- Created on: 07-04-22 19:59
Ozymandias – Percy Shelley
What’s it about?
The narrator meets a traveller who tells him about a ruined statue he’s seen in the middle of the desert. The statue is of a king who boasts of his power, though it has been destroyed by nature over time.
Context
Shelley was a Romantic poet, who valued emotion over reason, art over logic and nature above all.
He also was opposed to the monarchy – many believe the poem is an attack on King George III.
Ozymandias is another name for Rameses II, the most powerful Pharaoh of Egypt.
Language
Adjectives are used to describe the statue and Ozymandias himself as imposing and intimidating.
The king’s arroganceis shown through hyperbole and religious language: “king of kings” and “ye Mighty” both connote power, as well as alluding to the Bible.
The alliteration in the description of the desert emphasise the feeling of emptiness in the surroundings. This is ironic given the arrogant inscription on a statue that once symbolised a vast empire.
Ozymandias – Percy Shelley (2)
Form & structure
The framing of the story through the narrator telling a second-hand account of the traveller’s story creates a sense of detachment – possibly to show how irrelevant Ozymandias now is, but also possibly as a way of disguising Shelley’s attack on George III.
The poem uses the sonnet form, but blends Petrarchan, Shakespearean and a third pattern of Shelley’s devising. This shows how art is eventually altered over time and how structures can be destroyed.
Themes & ideas
Power of nature; Arrogance/pride; The impermanence of power; History
London – William Blake
What’s it about?
The narrator walks through the streets of London, observing misery everywhere. He accuses the church and monarch of doing nothing to ease the suffering.
Context
Blake was a late 18th century poet who believed in social equality and questioned the teachings of the Church.
Much of his work dealt with these themes. ‘London’ is part of a collection of poems he called ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’. The Songs of Innocence celebrated joy, childhood and nature, whilst Experience reflected issues in society. ‘London’ is one of the Songs of Experience.
Language
Contrasts show how the misery and suffering affects everything, until nothing, not even an “infant” is left innocent. This culminates with a paradox: “the marriage hearse.”
There are many words with negativeconnotations and connotations of pain.
Blake also makes reference to the Church, monarchy and law. There is a strong implication that he sees them as being complicit in the suffering of ordinary people.
London – William Blake (2)
Form & structure
The ABAB rhyme scheme reflects the sound of the narrator’s footsteps as he trudges around the city. It is unbroken, showing how the misery never ends.
Repetition and anaphora also show this idea of unending suffering.
Themes & ideas
Corruption
Place
Futility
Anger at those in power
Extract from ‘The Prelude’ – William Wordsworth
What’s it about?
Wordsworth recalls how he stole a boat one summer’s evening and took it out on the lake. At first, the experience is a pleasant one and he enjoys the beautiful scenery. A mountain appears on the horizon, and Wordsworth is struck by its power and size. He returns home, but his view of nature is forever altered.
Context
‘The Prelude’ is an autobiographical poem, exploring key moments in Wordsworth’s life.
Wordsworth was a Romantic poet, so nature was a key influence on him.
Language
Before the volta, the natural setting is described with vocabulary which connotes magic and peace to create an idyllic and joyous tone.
This changes to verbs and adjectives which imply threats and danger. The mountain is personified as a pursuer.
A fina shift sees language which connotes seriousness and reflection, and focuses on Wordsworth’s internal thoughts, rather than the scenery.
Throughout the poem, Wordsworth uses pathetic fallacy and nature imagery to convey different tones, showing how nature is vast and changeable.
Extract from ‘The Prelude’ – William Wordsworth (2
Form & structure
The poem is written in blank verse –unrhyming iambic pentameter (da-DUM x 5 per line). This highlights the importance of the moment.
The steady rhythm, coupled with enjambment and subordinate clauses as interjections makes the poem sound like natural speech, making the memory feel more intimate.
The poem is in three main sections: the light, carefree stealing of the boat which changes at the volta and develops a more serious tone. In the final section, the narrator reflects on how the experience changed him
Themes & ideas
The power of nature
Memory
Fear
My Last Duchess – Robert Browning
What’s it about?
The Duke of Ferrara shows a portrait of his now-dead Duchess to a visitor, revealing his jealousy at her friendly nature, and how he felt she wasn’t grateful enough for his title and power. He hints that he gave orders to have her murdered. It is then revealed the visitor has come to help arrange the Duke’s next marriage.
Context
The poem is based on the death of the Italian Duchess Lucrezia of Ferrara in 1561. After her death aged just 17, there were rumours that she had been poisoned.
Browning is famous for his dramatic monologues told from the perspective of disturbing and possessive men.
Language
The use of interjections and rhetorical questions show the natural, unplanned speech of the Duke, and how he loses control of his emotions. His vocabulary also reveals his jealousy and anger at his wife.
Browning uses ambiguous phrases to imply that the Duchess’ death was murder.
The Duke objectifies both his past and future Duchesses: “his daughter’s self […] is my object”. The juxtaposition of him discussing his wife/new bride with him showing off his art collection shows that he treats his wives as possessives, illustrating his jealousy. In the final lines, the staute of “Neptune […] taming a sea-horse” symbolises his expectations of his new bride.
My Last Duchess – Robert Browning (2)
Form & structure
The poem is a dramatic monologue (one character talking and revealing aspects of themselves).
The use of iambic pentameter and rhyming couplets suggest at the Duke’s desire for control. This contrasts to the use of enjambment, which suggest that he is losing control of his emotions.
The poem is framed by the Duke directing his visitor’s attention to his art collection, showing how the Duke objectifies the Duchess.
Themes & ideas
Possessiveness/jealousy
Corruption of power
Arrogance/pride
Identity
History
The Charge of the Light Brigade – Alfred Tennyson
What’s it about?
British cavalry soldiers charge towards Russian soldiers at the order of their commander. Due to a miscommunication, they are surrounded by enemy forces, who are armed with guns whilst the British only have swords. They fight valiantly and bravely. Many are killed, but their glory lives on.
Context
About a battle in the Crimean War (1853 – 1856).
At this point, newspapers were reporting errors made in war for the first time (previously, only military successes were announced) but there was still a strong sense of patriotism.
Language
Many of the verbs and adverbs have heroic connotations to emphasise the soldiers’ bravery.
Powerful verbs and adjectives as well as the semantic field of military and war highlight the danger and violence of the battle.
Death and Hell are personified and there are religious allusions further signifying the danger.
The Charge of the Light Brigade – Alfred Tennyson
Form & structure
The dactylic dimeter mimics the sound of the horses’ relentless charge forward.
Rhyming couplets and triplets are used but there is no regular rhyme scheme, reflecting the chaos of the battle.
The use of repetition and anaphora reinforces the men’s bravery and sense of duty, as well as the impending doom and inevitability of their defeat.
Themes & ideas
Reality of war
Glorification of troops
Obedience
Sense of duty
National pride/patriotism
Death
Futility of war
Exposure – Wilfred Owen
What’s it about?
Soldiers lie awake in the trenches, fearing an enemy attack. It is cold and miserable and the men’s minds begin to wander: they imagine their homes deserted and taken over by nature; they believe that sacrificing themselves in war is the only way to keep their homes and families safe, but are losing their faith and feel abandoned by God. Many soldiers die and are buried by their fellow soldiers.
Context
Wilfred Owen was a soldier in WW1 and wrote about his own experiences.
He was part of a group of poets who wrote about the painful, grim realities of war – a move away from patriotic propaganda.
He suffered “shell shock” (PTSD) but returned to the war and was killed at the end of the war.
Many soldiers died of “exposure” – hypothermia or sunstroke were common.
Language
Plural pronouns (“we”, “us”) show the collective experience of the soldiers.
Rhetorical questions highlight the monotony and futility of war.
Pathetic fallacy establishes a cold, bitter, miserable tone. Nature is personified as another enemy force, showing how the conditions that the soldiers lived in were as dangerous as the war itself; there is a sense of irony that the soldiers die of exposure rather than in battle. Nature is shown as a powerful and destructive force.
Exposure – Wilfred Owen (2)
Form & structure
The ABBAC rhyme scheme reflects the monotony of the soldiers’ experiences.
Half rhymes reflect how there was no satisfaction to be found and reflect the confusion of the men.
The final line of each stanza is a half-line which offers a reflection on the bleak, hopelessness of the soldiers’ situation. The repetition in these lines shows the relentlessness of the pain and misery.
The use of caesura and end-stopping
Themes & ideas
Reality of war
Death
Nature
Futility of war
Storm on the Island – Seamus Heaney
What’s it about?
The narrator describes how the inhabitants of an island believe they are prepared for a storm. However, the barren landscape they think of as a positive is revealed to be a negative when the storm hits, and the islanders’ confidence turns to fear.
Context
Heaney was a Northern Irish poet and much of his poetry focused on rural Irish settings.
The poem is also based on ‘The Troubles’ in Ireland: terror attacks from the IRA; violent clashes between Catholics and Protestants; republicans wanting independence from Britain; ‘invading’/’supporting’ British troops that occupied Northern Ireland.
Language
The poem is an extended metaphor for the political disturbances in Northern Ireland. Heaney uses vocabulary with connotations of violence and destruction to show the impact of both the storm and the political disturbances in Northern Ireland.
Assonance and sibilance reflect the sounds of the storm.
Plural pronouns show the community of the islanders, whilst direct address involves the reader.
Storm on the Island – Seamus Heaney (2)
Form & structure
The poem is in one stanza, which could be interpreted as it being build squat and sturdy like the houses Heaney describes. It could also reflect the unrelenting power of the storm.
The volta at line 14 (“but no”) shows the total loss of confidence the islanders have as the storm provokes fear.
The use of blank verse maintains a steady rhythm, which could also show the unrelenting power of the storm.
Themes & ideas
Power of nature
Political unrest
Fear
Community
Bayonet Charge - Ted Hughes
What’s it about?
A soldier is running towards enemy lines as part of an attack. The poem focuses on his emotions as he realises the reality of his situation. He sees a hare killed in gun-fire and hides behind a hedge.
Context
Set in World War One; written in 1957.
Inspired by Hughes’ father, who served in WW1, and by WW1 poets.
Language
Figurative language (similes and metaphors) questioning the point of war.
Semantic field of violence shows the reality of war.
Nature Imagery show the impact of WW1 on the natural setting, highlighting the harm war has on nature.
Bayonet Charge - Ted Hughes (2)
Form & structure
Starts in medias res (in the middle of the action) showing the abrupt nature of the charge.
In the second stanza, the pace slows to reflect the soldier’s bewilderment as he questions the point of war.
The “yellow hare” and the “green hedge” foreshadow the soldier’s fates of death/desertion.
Themes & ideas
Reality of war
Fear
Cowardice
Nature
Patriotism
Futility of war
Remains – Simon Armitage
What’s it about?
A soldier tells the story of shooting a looter in a bank raid. He can’t get the man’s death out of his head, especially once he goes home on leave.
Context
Based on a true event in Iraq.
Part of a collection exploring the effect of war on ex-soldiers.
Many ex-soldiers suffer from Post-Traumatic Shock Disorder (PTSD) which can cause flashbacks and nightmares.
Language
Colloquial language (chatty/slang) adds to the effect the soldier is recalling an anecdote, as well as trivialising the man’s death.
Graphic imagery describing the man’s death shows the horrors of war, as well as showing how the speaker had become desensitised to violence and death.
Remains – Simon Armitage (2)
Form & structure
No rhyme scheme and irregular rhythm contributes to the feeling that the soldier is telling a story, as does the use of enjambment.
The volta (turning point) shows the change in mood, showing the effect of the soldier’s PTSD.
Repetition shows how the killing haunts the soldier.
Themes & ideas
Impact of war
Reality of war
Death
PTSD
Memory
Guilt
Poppies – Jane Weir
What’s it about?
A mother smartens her son’s uniform before he leaves home – it is implied he’s joining the army. She goes to his room and then to the church yard, feeling nostalgic and lonely.
Context
As well as being a poet, Jane Weir is a textiles designer.
Armistice Sunday is another term for Remembrance Day on November 11th, which marks the end of World War One and honours fallen soldiers. Poppies are traditionally worn as they were the only flowers to still grow on the battle fields.
Language
The semantic field of sewing is used to show the mother’s care of her son.
Birds symbolise the son leaving and are traditional symbols of freedom, peace and mourning.
Sensory imagery shows the mother’s sense of loss as she recalls her son in as many ways as she can.
War imagery is used to hint at the son’s new role and the danger she fears he is in. The “graves” and “memorial” connote death and mourning: they could symbolise her sense of loss, or could implythat her son is dead.
Poppies – Jane Weir (2)
Form & structure
The first-person narrative gives a strong sense of the speaker’s internal emotions and show the intimacy of the mother-son relationship.
The poem is chronological, showing the mother preparing her son to leave, his departure and then her actions and emotions afterwards. The precise timeframe is ambiguous and her memories of his childhood blend with her actions, showing the lingering impact his departure has.
The irregular rhyme and rhythm and enjambment reflect the raw, uncensored emotions of the mother.
Themes & ideas
Loss
Grief
Death (?)
War
Memory
Freedom/independence
War Photographer – Carol Ann Duffy
What’s it about?
A war photographer is developing photographs that he’s taken in war zones across the world. He considers the safety of his home in England compared to what he’s seen. The final stanza addresses the point that the sympathy of the general public seeing these photos is limited
Context
War photographers are photo-journalists who travel around the world taking photos to show the impacts of war.
The poem was based on a friend of Duffy’s.
Language
Contrasts between England and war zones.
Contrasts between the widower’s grief and the readers’ limited compassion.
Emotive language to reflect the horrors he’s seen and their impact.
Religious imagery in stanza one to show how solemn and serious the photographer is about his work.
War Photographer – Carol Ann Duffy (2)
Form & structure
ABBCDD rhyme scheme + quatrains (4 line stanzas) reflects the “ordered rows”: shows the care the photographer has of his photos and contrasts to the chaos of war.
Enjambment reflects the gradual revealing of the photo as it develops.
Themes & ideas
Impact of war
Reality of war
Sense of duty
Memory
Apathy
Tissue – Imtiaz Dharker
What’s it about?
The poem explores the importance and control over humanity that paper has: religious texts, records of births and deaths, maps, blueprints, and receipts. The poem also explores the idea of creating things, especially buildings and human life.
Context
The poem is from a wider collection called ‘The Terrorist at My Table’, which questions how well we know the people around us.
Dharker is a Pakistan-born poet who grew up in Glasgow and now lives in both Britain and India. Common themes of her poetry are identity and searching for meaning.
Language
The semantic field of light is used to show understanding, (positive) change and enlightenment.
Dharker repeatedly explores the fragility of paper through verbs (“thinned”) and adjectives (“fine, “transparent”), which juxtaposes with the ideas that paper is powerful. The imagery which links paper to religion, buildings and money suggest both that paper is stronger than it seems, and that social constructs are more fragile than they seem.
The play on words of “tissue” denoting first paper and then human flesh creates a link between paper and humans, which also hints at the simultaneous fragility and strength of humanity.
Tissue – Imtiaz Dharker (2)
Form & structure
The speaker is detached and distant from the poem, creating a sense that the poem applies to everyone.
The irregular rhyme and rhythm and the enjambment highlights the fragility conveyed through the poem, as well as reflecting a desire for freedom and clarity.
The quatrains suggest that the poem is built up of different layers, which are linked through enjambment, much like paper, tissues, and human life.
The final line is isolated, emphasising the connection between paper and humanity.
Themes & ideas
Power of ideas
Identity
Power of humanity
Creation
The Emigrée – Carol Rumens
What’s it about?
The speaker recalls the city she had to leave as a child. Despite the fact it is now war-torn, she has a wholly positive view of the city, and is protective of it, despite threats by an ambiguous “they”, and the fact she cannot return to the city.
Context
Rumens’ poetry often explores the idea of “elsewhere”.
The “city” is unnamed, making it symbolic of all places where refugees have been forced to flee from.
Language
The city is personified, showing the love the speaker has for it, as well as making it seem vulnerable. The use of possessive pronouns (“my city”) signify a sense of belonging and protectiveness.
The semantic field of light is used to describe the city as bright and colourful, showing the speaker’s positive feelings for it. This contrasts with the vocabulary with connotations of violence and threat.
There are many references to childhood, including the allusion to fairy-tales in the beginning, which could suggest both the vulnerability of the city, and the speaker’s naivety.
The Emigrée – Carol Rumens (2)
Form & structure
Each stanza ends with a reference to sunlight, highlighting the speaker’s positive regard for the city.
The speaker’s view of the city grows more solid throughout the poem, culminating in the personification of the city.
The irregular rhyme and rhythm reflects the complex and unsettled state of the city. The extra line in the final stanza could reflect the speaker’s unwillingness to let go of her city.
Themes & ideas
Identify
Sense of place
Power of positivity
War
Childhood
Memory
Kamikaze – Beatrice Garland
What’s it about?
A kamikaze pilot is remembered by his daughter. She imagines him setting off on his journey, before viewing the fishing village below him and recalling his own childhood, which causes him to return home. He is ignored by his family and neighbours for his disgrace.
Context
Kamikaze pilots were Japanese suicide bombers in World War II. To be a Kamikaze pilot was a great honour, and military bravery was incredibly important. Cowardice would bring dishonour on a soldier. The honour or dishonour of one person was seen as a reflection on the whole family.
Language
Nature imagery is used emphasise the power and beauty of nature, perhaps hinting at the insignificance of human war in comparison.
The semantic field of fishing is used throughout the poem, as a connection to domestic life (which draws the pilot home). The descriptions of the fish connote treasure (“silver”, “prince), showing the importance of fishing to Japanese villages, as well as the power of nature. They also symbolise flags and infinity signs in their movements.
The negative and isolating treatment of the pilot on his return is ironic, which the speaker notes: “he must have wondered/ which had been the better way to die.”
Kamikaze – Beatrice Garland (2)
Form & structure
The poem is an imagined narrative from the perspective of the pilot’s daughter, showing the lasting impact of the pilot’s actions and their repercussions. The poem is mostly in third person, with reported speech in italics as the pilot’s daughter talks to her own children – perhaps indicating her forgiveness of her father or guilt at how she treated him. It could also suggest at how the new generation’s view of honour is changing.
The pilot’s own voice is absent, emphasising the distance between him and his family, and how he has been isolated.
Despite its length, the poem consists of just three sentences: the first details the pilot’s flight (as the daughter imagines it); the end-stop and change of voice at the end of the sentence signifies the pilot’s landing back home, and the end of his honour and family life. The final sentence is comparatively short, making its message (“which was the better way to die”) stark.
Themes & ideas
War
Family
Loss
Duty
Honour/pride
Childhood
Power of nature
Memory
History
Checking Out Me History – John Agard
What’s it about?
The speaker details how he was taught British history, but not history relating to his own Caribbean roots. He celebrates historical figures from Caribbean history before declaring his intent to learn his own history and build his identity on that.
Context
Agard grew up in Guyana in the Caribbean before moving to the UK in 1977. His poetry often explores culture and identity. His poetry also plays with language and grammar and is often designed to be performed.
Language
Agard uses non-standard, phonetic spellings and Afro-Caribbean vernacular English grammar to portray his own accent and dialect, which highlights pride in his culture and possibly his disdain for the colonial education he has received.
Metaphors for vision and blindness explore how his heritage has been deliberately erased and how he has discovered the truth.
Checking Out Me History – John Agard (2)
Form & structure
Agard uses rhythm and repetition to reflect oral storytelling traditions as a means of communicating history.
There is significant contrast between the stanzas which focus on British history and those which focus on Caribbean history. The Caribbean stanzas use broken syntax to show Agard disgregarding the confining language rules he’s been taught. The short lines increase the pace, making them sound urgent. The British stanzas have simple rhymes making them sound more childish; this is furthered by the juxtaposition of historical figures to nursery rhymes. The British historical figures are glossed over, either in assumption that the audience too has been taught about them, or to dismiss them as unimportant.
Themes & ideas
Culture
Identity
Colonialism
Erasure
Power of education
Anger
Power of humans
History
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