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II – Imagery III – Setting + Themes

-Free bird : Written by Maya Angelou, a black

Metaphor : “dips his wings in the sun’s orange rays”  color orange suggests the female writer in the ’50s – this poem

warmness of the sun’s rays / the word “dip” suggest a light, swift and free movement denounces segregation of black

Vocabulary : “a free bird leaps”  “leaps” suggests a joyful and happy movement people at that time.

-Caged Bird : This poem shows the situation of the

Metaphor : “bars of rage”  the caged bird turns his anger at the cage, which he blames black people : disadvantaged,

for his captivity and sadness secluded, not accepted within the US.

Vocabulary : “a bird that stalks”  as opposed to the free bird leaping, the caged bird Its aim is to change the situation by

“stalks” – suggests a clumsy, sad and desperate movement denouncing it.

Metaphor : “grave of dreams”  the caged bird is said to stand on the grave of dreams –

his cage is a limit to his dreams, their end, their “grave”

Visual image : “his wings are clipped and his feet are tied”  emphasizes on the

harshness of the bird’s life, creating a strong image in the reader’s mind







IV – Techniques used

I – Structure The techniques Maya Angelou uses to convey her political message,

6 stanzas (7/7/8/4/4/8 lines) and to convince :

3rd and 6th stanzas exactly similar – a Caged -Comparison between free bird and caged bird  stronger feeling of

refrain? Black people sang songs to injustice than if only the caged bird was described – makes free

forget their pain Bird bird’s happiness almost insolent

Structure which repeats itself = things -Small stanzas + almost regular rhythm + refrain  a sense of

will never change. repetition – gives an ironical sense of banality to the poem’s

RHYMES : almost none – exception : apparent signification, while the hidden meaning is extremely

2nd, 4th and 6th lines in stanzas 3 and important. Seems like a song  contradictory to Angelou’s goal.

6. Emphasizes the effect of surprise and the shock it produces on the

reader.





V – Links to other studied poems: Carpet Weavers – lack of freedom

-Song to the Men of England  both poems denounce an injustice within a society (in Song to the Men of England, inegality between

workers / peasants and nobles / aristocracy is denounced)

-Spectator ab Extra  again, an injustice is denounced (the same as in Song to the Men of England, through irony this time)

IMAGES

Structure He remembers his schooldays =

7 stanzas: 3 lines SETTING When he was a child

19th century poem « joyful » tells us it was happy time

each and a Individual experience = strong emotions for him

refrain and feelings « I have had » tells us they are

Past memories now over



He also remembers a woman:

« closed are her doors » = the

Closed doors represent the end

Of the relationship. Note use of

Techniques Inversion to emphasise the word

« All, All, the old familiar closed.

faces » = a refrain The Old Familiar Faces

This repetition creates

a mournful tone. « fairest » = shows his love for her

Use of a superlative to emphasise

her beauty



« ghost-like » = simile to compare

his life now; as if he were dead +

memories haunt him.

Links:

Memories of childhood + teenage times (first two stanzas) He revisits old places in order to

Links with Famhand and Little Boy Crying try and have happy memories

Life cycle = from childhood to death is linked with Plenty Again

And Rising Five

Missing people around him is linked with Plenty « Earth is a desert » = metaphor

Memories of first love = She dwelt and Muliebrity to show that his life seems barren

References to nature = Before the Sun and hostile + unwelcoming to him.

Structure IMAGES

1 stanza, 18 lines, no rhyme

Visual: « the way she moved

Repetitive « I have thought » adds

her hands and her waist » like

to sense of melancholy

a dance

1-4: memory – thinks of what she

saw

Images which appeal to smell:

5-6: description of the girls’ moves

« freshly washed clothes »

7-12: description of the smells

« road-dust »

13-14: girl inspires poet BUT she

« cow dung »

won’t use her as a metaphor

« monkey breath »

15-18: how happy she is to find the

« wet canna lilies »

dung

Muliebrity



Techniques:

Repetition – « I have thought so much about

the girl = shows how insistent the memory is. Links

Carpet Weavers: similarities are poverty,

Smells – repetition of « smell » and contrasting child labour, difficult working conditions.

smells like « monkey breath » and « lilies ». Sense of hope (paradise in carpet) +

Both pleasant and unpleasant. here girl smiles

No call for revolution

Metaphors – girl represents India (poverty, and Emphasis on memories (link with Plenty)

how they have to work, hardship) Caged Bird: idea of social injustice

She is also a metaphor for innocence and hope

as she smiles at the cow dung



Punctuation – no full stops from line 5 to end Settings

= memory is uninterrupted – flows freely Second half of 20th century

Dashes = allow for pauses and to reflect on India – near temple

the memory or image conjured up poverty

Character: thinks highly of himself, proud, pleased

By money, self-satisfaction, wants to sound sophisticated.

Setting Repetition of “I” and “my” = shows he is self- centred.

In a café –sitting at the table Repetition of word “money” shows he is superficial +

A place only for the rich at this time Interested in activities like eating + drinking

19th century – class divide in England Repetition of “they” = emphasises the division between

Allows us to picture this rich character

He is idle and does not seem to work The nobles/upper class and the poor / working class







Effects:

Use of “pelf “– a negative derogatory

term for money

From Spectator

Use of “sneer” = lower class mock him

Ab Extra but he does not care about their reaction

Didactic Role

Teaches us a moral lesson Use of “throw a crust” = disrespect

Creates a rich character to shock and and he does not want to touch them + it

repulse us + to question such a compares them to animals

society which allows a divide

Repetition of the refrain “Heigh –ho” =

Denounces arrogance of rich people

+ criticises gap between classes

The watcher makes the poem sound light-hearted

but contrasts with serious nature

from Simple rhyme scheme adds to sense

Use of an “I” character allows us to

get closer to him and inside his mind

outside. of a light-hearted song





Makes us ask ourselves if we are like

him or not.

Setting

Techniques: Forest, England – “untrodden

Exclamations: “oh” in stanza 3 = Ways” and “by the springs of Dove” Structure: 3 stanzas, 4

sound of sadness at what he has lost Natural setting Lines, and ABAB rhyme scheme

= simplicity of the structure

“the difference to me!” = personal Romantic Movement – the loss of a loved contrasts with author’s complex

loss and the exclamation shows how one and description of personal feelings feelings.

much it means to him. Wants to express a pure feeling

of love = simple poem reflects

Caesura in stanza 2 = makes us stop that purity.

and think about how beautiful she is



Lexical field of loneliness: She Dwelt Among the

“unknown”, “few could know”,

“untrodden ways” , “none to praise”

Untrodden Ways

= adds to sense of her being alone Links:

and isolated Mid-Term Break – discovery of death

at the end of the poem

Innoncence of brother

Point of view is child – here it is an

adult

Images:

Metaphor = “a violet by a mossy stone / Half hidden from the eye” Farmhand: both misunderstood –

Mossy stone = people or society him by women, Lucy by society

Violet = Lucy, her beauty and the fact she is different; being by the Loneliness – close to nature

Stone makes her stand out even more

Half-hidden = makes us realise she is special / she was shy / wild Before the Sun: links to nature +

A violet = flower / nature / purity / innocence / fragile Innocence

Mention of death + boy is lonely as

Simile “fair as a star” = extraordinary / something rare / to be looked at he talks to the sun



Romantic poems – personal loss

and feelings

Images:

“assorted heights would make a melodious

chime” = (metaphor) compared to bells =

Emphasises different ages of children Setting

20th century factory in Morocco =

“school of days” = factory life is compared Contemporary problem

to a school = ironic as they probably do not Story of child labour and theme of

have the chance to go to school exploitation



“Garden of Islam” = carpet and image of a Structure

Better life / paradise 4 stanzas + 3 lines each + no rhyme

scheme

Simile: “they watch their flickering knots like Suggests a rigidity in the structure =

television” = reflects speed of their work + Carpet Weavers, reflects the rigidity of children’s work

Ironic as they do not have televisions

Morocco

“Garden of Islam grows” + “the loom of

another world” = reference to another world

and idea of a frustrated childhood









Links:

Contrast idea of the carpets which will Muliebrity: theme of child labour (note in this poem only one girl)

travel in the “merchant’s truck” and end Foreign setting – Morocco and India

up in the mosque whereas the children Muliebrity seems to be more optimistic – in this poem, no sense

making it will not have the chance to of positive change to come

travel.

Song to the Men of England: workers’ difficult lives BUT in 19th

century and concerns adults + calls for change and revolution

Images:

Structure: Metaphor – “settle down in showers on the

Stanza 1+2 = cutting wood Dewy grass” = chips are compared to rain,

4-6 = making afire shows their graceful movement /

7-9 = cooking corn and eating abundant as well



Setting: Long sentences – “for some distance through the

Zimbabwe – 20th century air” = mirrors the long movement of the chips

Poet = farmer’s son

Respect for nature Lexical field of religion – prayers, spiral of smoke,

Nostalgia for a lost time when man / sacrificial = shows his respect for nature and for

nature were closer the sun





Techniques:

Powerful adjectives – “intense blue morning”

= day starts beautifully / metaphor for life

which hides difficulties (the rain)

Before the Sun

“big log” = he wants to be like an adult =

Metaphor for adulthood / body changing



Personification = “the wood hisses” and “the

sparks fly” = emphasises the way they move

+ their speed + graceful



The sun = as if sun was alive “winks” and “I

tell the sun” and “winks like a grown up”

Themes:

Life cycle / passing of time / a day = Rising Five

= boy feels linked to the sun / has great

Relationship between humans and nature = Farmhand

respect for it

Sense of harmony and respect “till the cobs are just two

Sun is also invited to a feast and offered a

little skeletons” = metaphor for death of that way of life

prayer

Links:

Social classes – links with role of women Men/Women Techniques:

and jobs they do = Plenty Enjambment: - creates pauses

“useless” = male viewpoint

Held / breath = mirrors the way

versus women’s view

Idea of personal achievement – she is good in which they held their breath

that these stories were

at telling stories just as the Farmhand is and so shows suspense

useful

good at farming: “To tell the stories was her Women’s work: busy in the

work.” Onomatopoeia – “tongue clacked”

kitchen – verbs “scoured” and

mirrors sound of tongues moving

“swept” and”stitched corn”.

Muliebrity: women working and the pleasure and noise they make

they take from their work even when it is

difficult “spinning” – simile of telling tales

and spinning cloth = both creative,

add to them, build them up



Colour – “thin grey washed over the

fields” = visual image of dull colours

Storyteller of day after excitement at night



Metaphor – bats for the stories =

shows how stories came alive at

night + were also frightening /

Fascinating

Setting:

Scotland + 20th century

Sibilance – “s” sound repeated = the

Woman’s point of view – and domain – the kitchen

buzz of the background noise and of

Lower class society

people talking

Structure:

4 stanzas – no regular rhyme scheme

Contrast: day and night

Irregularity – mirrors the way the stories grow and

Day = household chores seems

are unstructured - reflects free flowing speech – not

Miserable

Controlled.

Night = relaxed, shared moment, joy

Images:

Simile – “He lay in the four foot box as in his

Links: cot” = compares coffin / cot and it makes it

Little Boy Crying – child discovering the seem as if he’s sleeping / at peace

difficulties of life – from innocence to Shocking as it reminds us he should be asleep

experience like a baby not dead

Child’s viewpoint Personification – “whisper” highlights the fact

that these are anonymous voices – emphasises

Rising Five – portrayal of a child + mortality his feelings of isolation

“poppy bruise” = metaphor which appeals to

She dwelt – pain of losing someone + sense of colour – it is a flower which is

poem which dwells of personal feelings linked to remembrance









Mid-Term

Break





Techniques

First person narrative – a child’s viewpoint

Alliteration – classes to a close = makes the

word close stand out – sense of something Structure:

ending 7 stanzas of three lines – and 1 extra line

“s” sound = creates a soft and peaceful, almost which stands alone = emphasises

hushing sound = sad atmosphere shock ending that the boy who is

Euphemism for death – “heavy blow” and dead is just 4

“my trouble” = adults find it hard to say Setting:

Contrast – adults who cry and suffer and baby 20th century – Ireland

who “cooed and laughed” - innocent School / home / bedroom = intimate

Themes:

Relationship between adults and children –

Interpretations: Mid-Term Break = it explores diverse expressions of

The last stanza stands alone as if the author wanted to grief and sadness after the death of a child. A child’s

teach us a lesson. viewpoint

a) Don’t use your tears to use your father Plenty – the author understands reasons for her mother’s

b) Don’t mess around in the rain or you’ll get slapped Behaviour when she was younger.

c) Don’t mistreat your child – don’t ignore his tears

= shows the ambiguity of the ending and different

interpretations.





Techniques:

a) Monosyllabic words – stanza 1 “the quick

slap struck” = imitates the rhythm of the father

hitting his child

Little Boy Crying b) Use of verbs in continuous form – verbs in ing

“swimming”, “splashing” and “angling” = it makes

the reader feel the scene is unfolding before his

Eyes

c) Use of you – it suggests a universal

experience for all adults and children + it makes

Images: the reader feel involved in the scene OR it seems

In stanza 2: reference to fairytale, Jack and the to be a dialogue between the poet and the

Beanstalk = used to show how the boy feels. reader.

He sees his father as the “ogre” in the story. Boy’s feelings of anger towards his father are

Lexical field of height: “giant”, “ogre”, “colossal” Created by the following:

and “towers” = to show how mean and horrible Onomatopoeia = “chopping” – emphasises the

The child feels the father is, and to show that the violence of the action.

child presents himself as the innocent one. Caesura = “you hate him.” draws attention to those

Feelings expressed through a fairytale. words. We pause and consider the boy’s feelings.

Metaphor – stanza 3 – the mask = “nor guess the Enjambment = “dead / At last” = this placed at the

wavering hidden behind that mask.” He has to End of the lines reflects his anger.

pretend to be strict and firm.

Techniques:

Lists: “aspirin, porridge, petrol, bread” – shows that

everything was dear and counted Structure:

Tub – “pocked” like skin so personified which shows it is 8 stanzas + 4 lines

old. Repetitive structure mirrors the life

Smile = “a clasp” compared to the fastener on a bag; her of the family

need to keep a control on her emotions – not allow her fear Stanza 1: “When I was young”

and worries to show takes us back in time. First 6

“Her lips stretched back and anchored down” – this stanzas describe this childhood

emphasises the control on her face – her tight look where she did not understand.

“the shower’s a hot cascade” = emphasises the abundance Stanza 7 and 8 – today. She now

of water and contrasts with the past –”drought” understands better and misses her

family: “my scattered sisters. “









Similarities:

Old Familiar Faces = idea of Plenty

memories and thinking of

old times, missing people



Link with childhood – here

she does not realise at the

time why her mother behaves

like this = gap between

Parents / children Born in 1969 in South Africa and brought

same can be found in Mid-Term up in Karoo grasslands area which is a dry area.Winter is

Break as boy does not know nearly completely dry.

what is happening.

Techniques:

Imperative – “watch him” = orders us to

admire him

Onomatopoeia – “Ah” = word which Structure:

suggests the admiration we should feel 5 stanzas - 4 lines each

for him No regular rhyme scheme

Use of adjectives – “effortless”, “strong”, First 4 stanzas describe this awkward man.

= emphasises his physical prowess Last stanza – change in tone as we are told

and how good he is at his job to look differently at this man and admire him at

Simile – “like a lover to the song” = work.

shows the close relationship he has

with his tractor

Dash/hyphen = wants us to stop and

admire the farmer.

Metaphors – “the earth wave breaking”

= as the earth is turned it is compared Farmhand

to the waves – creates a visual image

“An open wound” = suggests a painful

memory which has not healed





Description of the farmer:

He smokes, “tells jokes”, + seems “careless”

Hairy hands + red face = suggests

Someone who works outdoors and who is manly

Links:

Muliebrity – someone who takes pride in “crops slow-growing as his mind” = does this mind he is

his work like the young girl. Contrast with simple-minded, slow to react, uneducated?

how masculinity is portrayed here and

femininity in Muliebrity. Seems more at ease with his tractors than with girls – only

Description of one character as observed looks at them.

by another. Has hopes and dreams but these are “awkward” and

Closeness to nature – Before the Sun “envious”.

Setting:

20th century

Factory – working class Links:

New Zealand Carpet Weavers = low social class,

Hard working conditions + social

Voice: first person narrative Injustice

Ironic? At the end when he says: “in

case an earthquake breaks out” = in Muliebrity = hard work, social

order to be positive. Injustice, low social class.



Personal reflection – see abundance of

Words such as “I like” or “I am” or “I can”

“These thoughts I push away” etc

Monologue









Techniques:

Poetic inversion – “The look on the faces of the

Unlucky I know also” + “These thoughts I push Images:

Away” = draws the reader’s attention to these “before the axe falls” – to be sacked – a violent image

Images + shows the emotion of the narrator + which mirrors the violence of being sacked

places emphasis on them “strangers who drift” – like boats on a river = suggests

Enjambment – “in the / summer” = last word of they arrive by accident and perhaps in large numbers

line is emphasised and without much hope of finding a job.

“…” = pause and so makes us think about dying.

Perhaps he stops as it is too painful to go on.

One of the great Romantic poets.

Shelley belonged to the aristocracy but

rebelled against his class.



This poem was written in 1819.



It seems to call for the working class to

rise up and rebel against the tyranny

Techniques used in the poem: of the landed gentry.



Metaphors: « Bees of England » =

The workers which suggests they

Do all the work whilst the « drones »

Reap all the benefits. Song to the Men

A « drone » is a parasite who lives

Off others. of England

The rich are also said to « drink your by

Blood » = vampires = a creature

that lives off others. Percy Bysshe

Shelley

Direct address: « wherefore » and

« Have ye leisure » = speaks to the

reader and calls for action. Stanzas: 8 stanzas with 4 lines each.

There is a sense of mounting anger in this poem.

Stanza 5: look at use of caesura to The questions add to this sense of fury.

create a contrast between what the Note the pessimistic ending which suggests

workers do and who benefits. the working class are building their own grave:

The comma shows this division « And weave your winding sheet. »

between the classes.

Called a song = call to arms

A rousing hymn to rebellion.

Rhyme/ Rhythm adds to this sense of a song.

Themes: key idea of passing of time and that we spend our time looking

to the future instead of living for the moment.

Stanza 1: little boy wants to be older « not four / But rising five. »

Stanza 2: nature used to reflect the cycle of life and the idea of

things dying and then being reborn.

Stanza 3: Day turning into night.

Techniques: The three stanzas can also be seen as representing the life cycle:

Simile: « we drop our youth » = Childhood – middle age and then death.

Treat life as something unimportant The 4th stanza seems to be a summing up if this main idea: an

and don’t realise how precious it is. Explanation of the three metaphorical stanzas.



« rot in the fruit » = suggest the

coming of old age.



« new buds » and « old leaves » =

reflects life passing

Rising Five

Stanza 2: full of assonance +

Rhyme which seems to imitate how by

alive nature is and growth. Norman Nicholson

Look at use of enjambment and

commas: « not May, / But rising

June. »

The pause and gap in the lines

may imitate the passing of time.

Born in the Lake District,

Look at the description of the little

boy = innocent child with glasses

England.

and curly hair and mouth full of Love of nature found in his

Toffee.

poems.

Dates: 1914 - 1987


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