Saturday, August 31, 2019
Critical discussion of at least three poems Essay
Compare the ways in which the poets write about unhappiness and suffering. In your response you must include a critical discussion of at least three poems. Throughout this comparative analysis, I will discuss the various ways in which the poets use lexis, imagery and structure to convey the sentiment and themes within the text. I have chosen Lizzie, Six and Shooting Stars by Carol Ann Duffy and Requiem for the Croppies by Seamus Heaney. The poems are all linked with suffering by the hands of an oppressive force. Lizzie by her abuser, the Jewish heroine by the Naziââ¬â¢s and the Irish by the English. The poems offer vivid and individual style to describe mutual suffering within varied circumstances. The titles of each poem are intended to capture the readerââ¬â¢s attention from the start. Lizzie, Six, is laid out as such to show the youth of the character of Lizzie. Not only in her name being abbreviated in a youthful manner, but the placement of the comma slows the reader down, forcing them to contemplate the purity of a child that age. She is able to establish an immediate sense of dread. In Shooting Stars, Duffy provides us with an ambiguous beginning. ââ¬ËStarsââ¬â¢ is representative of the Star of David and ââ¬ËShootingââ¬â¢ in the literal sense of the ââ¬Ëstarsââ¬â¢ being shot. Alternatively, Duffy may have been using the title metaphorically as a shooting star, representative of fleeting life for the Jewish people throughout the Nazi regime. The alliteration in Shooting Stars, is also a mind rhyme for Saal-Schutz, the Nazi SS Army. In Requiem for the Croppies, ââ¬ËRequiemââ¬â¢ defined as ââ¬Ëa Mass for the repose of the souls of the deadââ¬â¢ is intended to offer peace to the thousands that died at the hands of the English and those that died; being the ââ¬ËCroppiesââ¬â¢, the Irish men defending their land who cut their hair into a cropped fashion as a sign of rebellion. It is a gesture of praise and thanks and a wish for restfulness for those men whose lives were taken in the uprising of 1798. Samir Raheem describes it as ââ¬Ëa poem that romantically commemorates the Irish rebelsââ¬â¢. (Rahim, Telegraph, 2013). The word ââ¬ËCroppiesââ¬â¢ is also a rhyme for ââ¬Ëpoppiesââ¬â¢, a symbol of remembrance. The form and structure is indicative to the main themes of each poem and as a further notion; the suffering the characters, cultures or countrymen have endured. Representative of this is in Lizzie, 6, Duffy lays out the poem in a series of five stanzas with a call and response from the abuser and the abused narrative, typical in nature of a nursery rhyme and resonant particularly to the story ââ¬ËLittle Red Riding Hoodââ¬â¢. Critic Stan Smith describes ââ¬Å"Lizzie, Sixâ⬠as a ââ¬Ëplangent, Lorcaesque songâ⬠. Barry Wood stated that ââ¬ËDuffy knew Lorcaââ¬â¢s poetry or at least drew on similar traditions of popular childââ¬â¢s songs and rhymesââ¬â¢ (Wood, Tusitala. org. uk, 2007). The structure is repetitive and creates a feeling of tension. The repetition is also significant in the nature of the prolonged abuse, loss of innocence and suffering Lizzie is subjected to. The abuser also remains unidentified as it would be too uncomfortable for the reader to relate to the suffering the abuser inflicts (Morgan, Classnotes, 2015). In Shooting Stars, Duffy keeps the four line stanzas to create a similar notion of repetition of abuse and more likely to emphasize the routine and the standard, desensitised, rhythmic executions carried out by Nazi soldiers. Shooting Stars is written as a first person narrative and similarly to Lizzieââ¬â¢s abuser, her character is unidentified. This however, is to ensure the reader grasps the point that so many other Jews died namelessly during this period of persecution, highlighting the suffering. Heaney in Requiem takes a completely different approach in the structure of the poem and instead lays it out in the form of a sonnet. This is a mark of respect and love for the Irishmen who suffered and a juxtaposition to the ill respect shown by their oppressors. Written from the 3rd person narrative from the perspective of the Irish Rebels. Each line has roughly 10 or 11 syllables to it or just over, dictating the pace and the solemn, valiant story telling sentiment of the poem, an element similar to that of Lizzie. Six. Lizzie, Six uses dark and negative lexis throughout to increase the feeling of the suffering inflicted and the dialogue between the characters is disturbing. The doubling of the words ââ¬Ëmoonââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëfieldsââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëloveââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëwoodââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëdarkââ¬â¢ in lines 2 and 3 of each stanza are offered primarily in the view of the innocence of a child, i. e. In literature, the moon is commonly linked to imagination and fields to that of freedom etc. Secondly the words are manipulated by the adult abuser, effectively stripping the original association of the word and replacing it with a horrific alternative showing the intention of emotional abuse. Wood says that Duffy presents ââ¬Ëa poignant example of ââ¬Å"broken listeningâ⬠, of ââ¬â in this case ââ¬â the adult listener refusing to hear or misinterpreting what is heard and of the child destroyed by being unheard and ignoredââ¬â¢ (B Wood, 2006). It also represents consistent and worsening abuse as the words start with a lighter, childlike tone ââ¬Ëmoonââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëfieldsââ¬â¢ and literally end with ââ¬Ëdarkââ¬â¢. The use of language in Lizzie, Six is vulgar, particularly towards the end of the poem; Duffy uses this to show how the level of abuse and suffering worsens throughout the poem and over time and transitions from mental to physical suffering. She shows this in the penultimate stanza when the abuser says ââ¬ËIââ¬â¢ll give you wood, when your bottomââ¬â¢s bareââ¬â¢. ââ¬ËWoodââ¬â¢ is a disturbing metaphor and the literal intention the abuser becomes apparent here. The abuser asks in stanza five ââ¬ËWhere are you hiding? ââ¬â¢ Duffy uses this to allow the reader to see the abuser demonstrating his menacing mental control over Lizzie as she is powerless to hide from him. In the sixth stanza, the abuser asks ââ¬ËWhy are you crying? ââ¬â¢ ââ¬â a physical display of an emotional response. (Morgan, Classnotes, 2015). Duffy shows a similar representation of the emotional and physical realms of suffering in Shooting Stars. ââ¬ËI heard the click. Not yet. A trickââ¬â¢ ââ¬â The Nazi soldier at the time of the speakerââ¬â¢s execution uses excessive cruelty and mental torture in toying ââ¬Ëwith his victim and the short sentences at the end of the line create tension and a sense of the real experience of the woman and the power wielded by the soldierââ¬â¢ (MissGrant, 2015). Duffy demonstrates physical anguish in the third stanza at the fear of rape from the Naziââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËMy bowels opened in a ragged gape of fearââ¬â¢. Duffyââ¬â¢s word choice here is extreme but emphasizes the sheer terror that a woman would go through in this situation. The ââ¬Ëgapeââ¬â¢ is representative of a screaming mouth (MissGrant, 2015) and is intentionally inversed as ââ¬Ëgagged rapeââ¬â¢. The effect it has is it to double the meaning and subsequently intensify the horror of the suffering she endured in this situation. Heaney represents the emotional suffering in the form of their love of the country, not necessarily the Irishmen individually but as a whole, due to the oppression from the English ââ¬â ââ¬Ëwe moved quick and sudden in our own countryââ¬â¢. Heaney demonstrates the resentment of the Irish in this sentence and ââ¬Ëthe priest lay behind ditches with the trampââ¬â¢ ââ¬â Heaney juxtaposes the holiest man with the lowliest man, neither had any advantage over the other when it came to slaughter from their oppressors. The personification Heaney offers upon the Irish defeat on Vinegar Hill ââ¬ËThe Hillside blushed, soaked in our broken waveââ¬â¢; Provokes the emotional and physical in the form of slight embarrassment at their being ill equipped to deter the English attack ââ¬Ëshaking scythes at cannonââ¬â¢ but also the physicality or their blood staining the green of the fields to red. The first and last line include the imagery of barley, a symbol for revolution and independence (Morgan, Classnotes, 2015). Heaney uses Irony from the barley that the Irish rebels carried in their pockets for food, was in fact the very same that enabled the barley ââ¬Ëto grow up ââ¬Ëout of the graveââ¬â¢ fertilized by the blood of Irish souls. Critic Paul Hurt says that the first line ââ¬ËThe pockets of our greatcoats full of barleyââ¬â¢ and the last line ââ¬ËAnd in August the barley grew up out of the graveââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"are contrived. They belong to the world of ââ¬Ëself-consciously significant detailsââ¬â¢ which are routine in many war films, in films of all kindsâ⬠(Paul Hurt, 2015). But Critic Blake Morrison said that Seamus Heaney is ââ¬Ëthat rare thing, a poet rated highly by critics and academics yet popular with ââ¬Ëthe common readerââ¬â¢ and as a common reader, Iââ¬â¢m rather inclined to appreciate the majestic quality and symbolism of the re-birth of an army ready to fight and again. All three poems have a common feature with the echoed sadness and ill treatment and respect imposed from their oppressors with mass and shallow graves in Shooting Stars and Requiem ââ¬Ëthey buried us without shroud or coffinââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëbetween the gaps of corpses I could see a childââ¬â¢. And in Lizzie, Six, the abuserââ¬â¢s final statement ââ¬ËIââ¬â¢ll give you the dark and I do not careââ¬â¢. The sentence and grammar structure in Lizzie, Six, is rigid and unchanging. The first line of each stanza is a question from the abuser, the second a response from the abused and in the third and fourth lies a demonic manipulation of Lizzies answer; Wood says ââ¬ËThe childââ¬â¢s fear is answered only by a distorted or distorting ââ¬Å"echoâ⬠from the adult world which, if less brutal and punitive than the world of ââ¬Å"Lizzie, Sixâ⬠, is equally isolating and disquieting. ââ¬â¢ (B Wood, 2006) Possibly Duffy used this sentence structure to emphasise the unrelenting suffering in the emotional, and physical that Lizzie faces. In Shooting Stars, Duffy takes an alternative approach and to represent the last thoughts of a dying woman offers a certain level of enjambment within the text. The punctuation is free in that ââ¬ËRebecca Rachel Ruth Aaron Emmanuel Davidââ¬â¢ are listed without breath to exaggerate the extent of the ââ¬Ënamelessââ¬â¢ people that have suffered. This is also a juxtaposition. This continues later in the poem with ââ¬ËSara Ezraâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢ Duffy has done this to show the list could go on and on without pause. Almost as if those that have suffered spring to mind too easily for the sheer number of victims. Duffy uses repetition in the use of the word ââ¬ËRemember. A resounding theme of the poem is to remember the suffering of an entire race and to relate this lessons of history to modern day struggles. Duffy uses Anaphora in the fifth stanza to reiterate this theme. ââ¬Å"After immense suffering someone takes tea on the lawn. After the terrible moans a boy washes his uniform. After the history lesson children run to their toysâ⬠. ââ¬ËTea on the lawnââ¬â¢ refers to how normal life can resume so quickly after horrific events have taken place and can be forgotten as easily as ââ¬Ëa boy washes his uniformââ¬â¢ symbolic of the cleansing of the Jewish race (MissGrant, 2015). Heaney uses enjambment to slow the pace. It is used to represent the Irish Rebels speed of movement; ââ¬ËA people, hardly marching ââ¬â on the hike-ââ¬Ë, common folk, pacing themselves and climbing a hill, probably wounded, weary and hungry. Enjambment is used where the sonnet breaks form and introducing their demise; ââ¬ËUntil, on Vinegar Hill, the fatal conclave. ââ¬â¢ Heaney uses this sentence structure to slow the reader and to emphasise the fall of the rebels and their devastation emotionally and physically. It adds a dramatic and magnificent tone to their sacrifice. In a similar sub-theme to Shooting Stars, remembrance is also a theme in Requiem, highlighted throughout the poem by Heaneyââ¬â¢s word choice. Sound, sight, touch and sensation feature regularly in Shooting stars to evoke emotion. Straight away we are greeted with silence from the Dead Jew ââ¬ËAfter I no longer speakââ¬â¢ ââ¬â a tradition of remembrance. We have a glimpse into her life that she was married, Duffy displays this with the ââ¬Ëwedding ringââ¬â¢, the dear that caused the sensation of ââ¬Ëurine trickling down her legsââ¬â¢ ââ¬â a physical display of an emotional response. And the brutal and callous touch of the soldiers to ââ¬Ësalvageââ¬â¢ what they see as the only valuable part of her when they break her finger to retrieve her wedding ring. Duffy uses the element of Marriage to re-inforce human emotion as a juxtaposition against the desensitised Naziââ¬â¢s. Duffy also uses onomatopoeia in the word ââ¬Ëclickââ¬â¢ to highlight the mental torture the soldier imposes on the Jewish prisoner. Assonance and rhyming are used continuously through Requiem to promote the feeling of a steady struggle. ââ¬Ëkitchensââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëstrickingââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ësuddenââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëcountryââ¬â¢ in the opening lines. ââ¬Ëcampââ¬â¢, ââ¬â¢trampââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëhikeââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëpikeââ¬â¢ are rhymes used every other line. Heaney does this to re-inforce the military tone of the poem, introducing a steady drumming for the rebels to march in time to. Heaney breaks the rhyme momentarily to create a sense of doom. He shows this in ââ¬Ëthe final conclaveââ¬â¢. Heaney returns immediately to the rhyme to emphasise the re-birth of the soldiers and the importance of the remembrance for the those who suffered so they could live. Duffy uses a similar technique in Shooting Stars in ââ¬Ëopened the ragged gape of fearââ¬â¢ to re-inforce horror of the statement. She also uses alliteration in ââ¬ËRebecca Rachel Ruthââ¬â¢ and uses traditional Jewish names to heighten the exhaustive list of those who suffered. In Lizzie, Six, Duffy uses consonance rather than assonance and alliteration, closely implied to Anaphora to accentuate the nervous disposition of the reader ââ¬ËWhatââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËWhereââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËWhatââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËWhereââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËWhyââ¬â¢ at the beginning of each stanza and consonance in ââ¬ËIââ¬â¢m afraid of the dark. Iââ¬â¢ll give you the dark and I do not careââ¬â¢ similar to the techniques used in Shooting Stars in the first line uses consonance and an imperfect pararhyme ââ¬Ëspeak and breakââ¬â¢ in the first line. an All three poems have a common theme of rhyme, but the intention is different. Lizzie, Six and Requiem show tail rhyme and holorime both in an effort to make the poem memorable, but Duffy uses this in Lizzie, Six to exaggerate the loss of innocence of a child. Rhyming the poem in a simplistic child-like manner emphasises the haunting suffering. Whereas Heaney uses this technique to signify the remembrance theme of the poem, taking the literal of making the poem memorable and easy to read. All three poems have a common connection to the suffering imposed from an oppressor. For Lizzie, Six, Lizzie is suffering at the hands of her abuser. For Shooting Stars, the Jewish women and the Jewish race are suffering from the oppression of the Nazis and for Requiem for the Croppies, the Irishmen suffering for the loss of their land to the English. Shooting Stars and Requiem have a sub-theme of remembrance and Lizzie Six, the loss of innocence. Though loss of innocence can be found in Shooting Stars and Requiem, their sufferance is predominantly for a race, and land rather than innocence. Regular assonance and consonance are used throughout all three poems, but to different ends, similarly with intentional use of rhyming. The poems vividly highlight suffering throughout, with careful word choice, simplistic yet vulgar in Lizzie, Six to make the suffering more haunting, Grim and factual in Shooting Stars to exaggerate the horror of the suffering and militant and simple to aid the remembrance of the those who suffered in Requiem for the Croppies. References Gardiner, M. (2015). Summaries of selected poetry by Seamus Heaney (Higher School Certificate 1998). [online] Files. puzzling. org. Available at: https://files. puzzling. org/wayback/hsc/heaney [Accessed 17 Nov. 2015]. Grant, M. (2015). [online] View. officeapps. live. com. Available at: https://view. officeapps. live. com/op/view. aspx? src=http%3A%2F%2Fmissgrantenglish. wikispaces. com%2Ffile%2Fview%2FRevision%2BPack. docx [Accessed 18 Nov. 2015]. Hurt, P. (2015). Paul Hurt on Seamus Heaneyââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËThe Grauballe Manââ¬â¢ and other poems. [online] Linkagenet. com. Available at: http://www. linkagenet. com/reviews/heaneypoemcriticism. htm#requiem [Accessed 18 Nov. 2015]. McMahon, D. (2013). A quick reading of Seamus Heaneyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Requiem for the Croppiesâ⬠. [online] pulpteacher. Available at: https://pulpteacher. wordpress. com/2013/03/13/a-quick-reading-of-seamus-heaneys-requiem-for-the-croppies/ [Accessed 17 Nov. 2015].
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