Poetry pre-1900 Anthology
- Created by: Isabella
- Created on: 23-04-13 20:02
Love That Doth Reign and Live Within My Heart by H
Howard- Father of English Sonnets with Thomas Wyatt
Sonnet form
ABAB rhyme scheme
Unrequited love
Translation of Petrachan sonnet, which is about Petrachan's love Laura
The Octave- about him being rejected
The Sestet- Not being able to tell her
Lexis of war imagery- "captive/clad/arms/fought/banner/coward/taketh his flight
"she taught me love and pain"- she helped him to love, but also the pain of rejection
New Prince, New Pomp by Robert Southwell
Describing The Navtivity
Religious crisis- Catholicism/Protestants
Southwell- telling those disillusioned with Catholic "fuss" to look at Baby Jesus' plain and simple birth
Emotionally charged poem
Stanza 7- connecting the simple barn items with royalty "this stable is a prince's court"
Lexis of royal/wealthy words- "orient pearl/prince/chair of state/pomp/plate/royal liveries/king"
Imperative tone= "behold/despise him not/weigh not his mother's poor attire/with joy approach/do homage/highly prize his poem"
Metaphor for Jesus= "an orient pearl is often found in the depth of dirty mire"
New Prince, New Pomp= Fuss with royalty and riches
Sonnet CXXX by William Shakespeare
Shakespearen sonnet
ABAB rhyme scheme
Talking about his mistress- the Dark Lady
Describing her faults and staying he still loves her for them- "If hair be wires, then wires grow on her head"
Separated into 3 quatraines, with a couplet at the end
Quatrain One: About colours
Q3: About smells
"she walks treads on the ground"- she is not an angel/goddess, she is normal
Picks up traditional love poems and changes them
Snow White image= red/white/black, these are used to describe SW's beauty, this is used to describe her flaws
Sonnet: Batter My Heart by John Donne
Metaphysical poet
"Batter"- imagery of hardships
"breake, blow, burn"- quick, bam,bam, bam beat
ABBA rhyme scheme- nearly
The rhyme scheme breaks down as he does
His enemy- his sins
Towards the end of poem- breakdown
Guilt of sins overtake him
Feels as if he is promised to Satan, because he was previously a womansier and how he had treated women
Lexis of violence words- "batter/knocke/bend/breake/blow/burne/viceroy/captiv'd/imprison"
Does not know how to connect with God- asks God to **** him
To Virgins, To Make Much of Time by Robert Herrick
Directly appealing to virgins to have sex
Protestant/Catholic war, uncertain times of war
Metaphysical poet
Rosebuds- precious, but he is pointing that it will eventuall wilt and die, like humans
Excessive endstopping- everything is going to come to an end
Sense of time stopping throughout the poem
Carpe diem- "seize the day" sense
And/And/But/Then- strong persuasive sense to get women to live each day as its last
Lexical set of time- "Old Time/To-morrow/sooner/nearer/age/spent/times/time/tarry
Sex/Love is only implied, never mentioned
Rhyme scheme- ABAB
To My Dear and Loving Husband by Anne Bradstreet
Tribute to her husband- Simon Bradstreet
Metaphysical poet
AABB rhyme scheme
The strong couplets used reflects the strong relationship that they have (couple)
"If ever two were one, then surely we"- strong, declarative opening
Juxtaposition of earth and heaven- "the heavens/persever"
"we may live ever"- their love will go on forever, even after death
Devout Puritan
Lexical set of wealth- "prize/gold/riches", saying that their love is better then wealth
"we live"- death cannot part them
The use of enjambent after gold- love has no bounds
The Mower Against Gardens by Andrew Marvell
Mower= cuts down, destroys gardens
Just before Age of Enlightment
Everything was structured and manipulated
Roses were being bought in from abroad
Compare with piece on GM Foods
Marvell, Puritan, likes simplicity and things growing natural- the excessive use of endstopping reflects his hard line puritan
Lexis of words associated with seduction= "luxurious/seduce/luscious/perfumes/wild the tamme/Seraglio/eunuchs/sex"- referring to what was going on socially, not happy about it due to his religious beliefs
"No plant now knows the stock from which it came"- everything is so mixed up that the plants do not know its source
The garden is a metaphor for what he believes is the fall of man
A Satirical Elegy on The Death of the Late Famous
Satire= joke
Elegy= tributes in poetic form
Restorian- George III
UK becoming more democratic, start of the Industrial Revolution
Swift, a soldier
Sarcastic about the death about well respected general
Feels angry that the general died in bed, whilst his friends died in battle
AABB rhyme scheme, reflecting the Age of Enlightment
"He burnt his candle to the snuff/He left behind so great a stink"- Metaphor for his selfishness, right until the way
"True to his profit and pride"- why people don't like him- he made a profit the war
"Turn'd to that dirt from whence he sprung"- bibical reference, back to earth, made from earth
I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud by William Wordsworth
Romantic poet- the sublime and obbessed with nature
Referring to himself as a cloud- he is one with nature
Written after walk with his very close sister, Dorothy, and they saw daffodils
Iambic Tetrameter- four beat, trance like
The walk and daffodils, happy memories for him= "in a vacant or in pensive mood/they flash upon that inward eye/and then my heart with pleasure fills"
The use of 1st person reflects his lonilness (title- LONELY) and his connection with nature
Rain mentioned in Dorothy's account- no rain, as he wants a happy poem
Personification of daffodils- "tossing their heads in a sprightly dance"- sounds exciting and optimistic
Happy personifcation of dancing- "dancing in the breeze/sprightly dance/waves beside them danced"
Optimistic tone of poem
Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Romantic poet
Kubla Khan- Mongol leader
Reading about him under the influence of opium
Then dreamt- and wrote the poem about his dream
Describes KK's plan to build a luxurious poem
Sensual imagery- "an incense bearing tree", helps to bring the story to life
Enjambent- like the beat of the river
Xandau- name of the palace he built
ABBA rhyme scheme- not rigid, however, hetic scheme- reflecting his opium influence
1/2 rhymes used
"A savage place!as holy and enchanted!"- this line and onwards the poem becomes Gothic
She Walks in Beauty by George Gordon Byron
Famous romantic poet
Well known womansier
In love with lady- Mrs Wilmot Horton
"like the night"- she has to wear the black dress of mourning
He only wants her, can't have her as she is a widow
"so soft, so calm, yet eloquent"- admiring her many layers
ABAB rhyme scheme
Use of colon for endstopping, "Meet in her aspect and her eyes:"- the reader needs a breath as does he after seeing her
Use of sibliance- "serenly sweet"- gives a sweet romantic sound
Lexis of dark/light: "dark/bright/light/day/shade/ray/lightens"- he lights up her world
There is no mention of gown and walking= seeking larger than mere physical despriction
Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Romantic poet (famous along with Byron)
Describes the fall of dictator Ozymandias
Ozymandias= King of Air, he is the king of nothing essentially
Endstopping used to show the authority he had, with the use of colons as they are absolite, like his power
Enjambent used emphasises the story like flow of the poem, as it flows in the same way as a campfire story would
Use of s, snake like; sly like a dictator
Nature took over Ozymandias' world
Sonnet (Petrachan) form, more fractured then traditional
Volta comes at line 11 and 12- "I am Ozymandias, King of Kings!"
Ironic- "ye and mighty and despair!"- a declaration of his power, then the next line is about his power gone- "nothing beside remains"
First Love by John Clare
Rural poet
Grow up in extreme povetry
Poor education-often looked down on for this
About his first love Mary Joyce, daughter of wealthy farmer, which meant he couldn't marry her
ABAB- perfect rhymes, like he views her as
"her face bloomed"- like new life, his life began again when he saw her
Stanza three- everything is not how it should be, because he is so nervous
"she seemed to hear my silent voice"-suggestions of her returning and reference to his povetry
Lexis of nature= "bloomed/flower/trees/bushes/flowers/winter/snow"
"And can return no more"- realising that he cannot live without her- she has her heart
To Autumn by John Keats
Romantic poet
Keats saw himself as a failure
Autumn personified as a women
Poem of praise and joy
Ode to Autumn
Talking about the sublime
Personification of the sun-"Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun"
Personifcation of summer- "For summer has o'erbrimm'd their clammy cells"- summer has been set free
Lexical set of nature= "season/mists/fruitfulness/sun/fruit/vines/thatch/apples/moss/ripeness/core/hazel shells/flowers/bees/warm days/summer/granary/wind/poppies/brook/cyder-press/spring/rosy/gnats/river swallows/light wind/lambs/hedge-crickets/red breast/swallows- further emphasises Keats' love of nature and sublime
Break, Break, Break by Alfred Lord Tennyson
Victorian
Over sentimental- classical repressed Victorian feelings
Devstated over the death of his best friend, Hallam
Went to Lincolnshire coasts- waves reflected his personal feelings
Break, break, break= representative of the crashing waves on the coasts and him feeling broken over his friend's death
Second stanza- strong sense of nolstagia-"that he shouts with his sister at play!"- remembering when they used to play
"But o for the touch of a vanish'd hand"- reaching out for his friend's hand, but it is not there
"And the stately ships go on"- he is on pause whilst grieving, whilst the rest of life goes on
Lexical set of youth- "boy/play/lad"- further emphasising the sense of nolstagia
It is in 1st person, as it is a very personal poem on personal feelings
Spellbound by Emily Bronte
Magic
She has been spellbound by supernatural force
the Sublime and nature
Pathethic fallacy= stormy, gothicness tone reflected
Inspired by the Yorkshire moors
Poem gets progressively worse- climaxes when she gives up and she stays
"clouds beyond clouds/wastes beyond wastes"- contrast between heaven and hell
"But a tyrant spell has bound me"- supernatural force, tyrant= dictator, possibly the Devil
"I will not go"- modal verb, she chooses to stay
ABAB rhyme scheme= incanation like
Lexis of negative words= "night/darkening/wild/tyrant/giant/storm/descending/wastes/drear
There Is No Good, The Wicked Saith
Dislikes people suddenly being religious
Agnostic
Questioning religion- not anti religion
Stanza 2,3,4= representative of the class system
Stanza One= his own thoughts own on God, "there is no God"
Stanza Two= Age, "There is no God, a youngester thinks"- the young person has not been influenced by the Church
Stanza Three= Working class, "There is no god/to make a little money"- thinks there is no god, but if there is he cares little for working class like him
Stanza Four= Rich, "whether there be, the rich man says, it matters very little"- the rich man does not care either way as long as he gets money- he says his thoughts in regards to the others, b/c he is above them
Last four stanzas= criticism of the Church and its followers
Dying by Emily Dickinson
Dying= dynamic verb
Had Agoraphobia= fear of going outside
Stayed in her room all her life
Imagining what would happen she dies
the fly image is contrasted with the seriousness of death
Stanza One: The Fly, Stanza Two: Close people, Stanza Three: Her items, Stanza Four: The Final Push
"For the last onset when the king/be witnessed in the room"- king is referring to God, she was highly religious so expects to go to heaven
"Between the light and me"- reference to Heaven (go towards the light!)
The whole poem is anti-climaxing, everything is calm, people have stopped crying, the will is dealt with,so she can go in peace- reaches this at the end- "I could not see to see"
Lexis of religion= "king/witnessed/the light"- representative of her strong religion
Nature's Questioning by Thomas Hardy
Religious skeptical
Title= personifcation already
Pessimistic= reflects his relgious crisis
Questioning God,if he is there
Pathethic fallacy of winds and rain
Him, Nature, Innocent child nature
"Or come we an Automaton/Unconcious of our pains"- are we being controlled?
"Or is it some high Plan betides"- maybe God has some big plan for us
Lexical set of bibical references= "Vast Imbecility/Mighty/Godhead/high Plan/Evil/Good/Forlorn Hope/Eartth's/Life and Death- reflects religious themes
Poem narrative moves from school children to the actual nature
Frequent use of question marks= reflects inquestive nature of the poem
God's Grandeur by Gerald Manely Hopkins
Jesuit
Gave up poetry when he became religious, then decided it could be used as worship
Annoyed with people's disregard for God and man's destruction of nature
Petrachan sonnet form
Octave= why people disregard God
Volta= "And for all this, nature is never spent"
Sestet= talking about God's power
He is a traditonalist, tries to fit hymns into poetry and prefers archaic langauge (the Holy Ghost)
"over the bent"- Adam and Eve reference= ruined it all
"World broods with warm breast and with ah!bright wings"- optimistic, God is with us, everything is okay= references to angels, God is watching us+
Comments
No comments have yet been made