AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier Poem / Poet Conceptual Response ‘Havisham’ “Duffy’s agenda in much of her work…” Carol Ann Duffy ‘Anne Hathaway’ Carol Ann Duffy “Duffy’s agenda in much of her work…” General Comment on Meaning Produces a recreation of Charles Dickens’ jilted ‘spinster’, Miss Havisham, to critique the institution of marriage Critiques the ways in which women’s perceptions or experiences have historically been circumscribed – or ‘written’ - by men and patriarchal society. Paragraph One Paragraph Two Concluding Sentence Oxymoron – “Beloved…” suggests her confusion and further suggests that her fractured mind is fragile; she is unable to distinguish between love and hate Likewise, the participle, ‘yellowing,’ is used to show that her white wedding dress – a symbol of virginal purity – is slowly decaying in her wardrobe, as she dwells upon her wedding day. In addition, the metaphor suggested by the verb ‘cawing’ demonstrates the dehumanising effect of her being jilted at the altar; Duffy indicates, then, that if a woman fails to conform to the expectations of a patriarchal society, she is perceived as being less than fully human. Duffy has used the lexis of colour to again critique the institution of marriage, wherein a bride must demonstrate that she meets her husband’s expectations regarding her purity. Throughout this poem Duffy has attempted to analyse the way in which marriage – and by extension other aspects of a patriarchal society – can mould perceptions of women and the dreadful consequences that may result. By recreating such a disturbing yet sympathetic character as Miss Havisham, Duffy’s critique is highly successful. ‘Fantasy’ ‘Fantasist’ Lexical field of fantasy and romance – the “bed we loved in was a spinning world / of forests, castles, torchlight, clifftops, seas / where he would dive for Metaphor – “my body now a softer rhyme to his, now echo, assonance; his touch / a verb dancing in the centre of a noun” – Hathaway describes Shakespeare’s Throughout this poem Duffy has tried to inform women that they should live their own life for who they really are, rather than being circumscribed by a patriarchal society. The fact that Shakespeare AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier pearls”. Sensual metaphor of a “Romance /and drama played by touch, by scent, by taste” ‘Before You Were Mine’ Carol An Duffy “Duffy’s agenda in much of her work…” Inhabits the voice of a daughter who feels responsible for taking away her mother’s youthfulness, femininity, and glamour simply by being born – to critique the institution of the mother-daughter bond. Structured like a series of snapshots from the different stages of the narrator’s mother’s life. In the first stanza, the “polka-dot dresses” symbolise her youthfulness, femininity and glamour, as does the paratactic sentence, “Marilyn”, with its link to Marilyn Monroe. Even this suggests tragedy, however, as the reader will be aware that, though this iconic figure connotes beauty, Marilyn’s glamour was ultimately her downfall, as she became caught up in the destructive world of celebrity and excess. lovemaking in a way that echoes his legendary skills as a writer. Feminist perspective: he has circumscribed her identity. died in 1616 but the poem was written in 1999 shows that this issue has been ongoing and Carol Ann Duffy ‘s attempt to resolve it remains a significant project. AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier ‘Stealing’ Carol Ann Duffy ‘Mother, any distance…’ Simon Armitage Duffy’s agenda in much of her work, including The World’s Wife and Feminine Gospels, is to critique the ways in which women’s identities are formed in society. However, in ‘Stealing’, it is not the plight of women that concerns the poet, but the way in which society deals with marginalised, outsider figures. Simon Armitage’s poetry, by contrast, often explores and critiques the fine details of human relationships as they change and develop through our lives. For example in “mother any distance” Armitage uses a variety of poetic techniques to present a son who is moving away from his mother, to explore the separation anxiety often In the first instance, Duffy uses a metaphor and internal rhyme to show that her monologist is insecure and cold minded. She feels she is only worth with someone on the same level as her: someone ‘cold’ and unfeeling, like a snowman. The narrator describes an embrace with the snowman. She is not looking for warmth unlike “normal” people who would. The fact that she wants to be with someone whose “torso [is] frozen stiff” – and is therefore emotionally numb - shows her insecurity, and her desire to feel “a fierce chill piercing [her] gut” might suggest a tendency towards self-harm, perhaps stemming from problems in her past relationships. In the first stanza the metaphor “a second pair of hands” has two meanings to it. The first being the literal meaning of that, when measuring distances larger than the span of one Duffy’s syntactic choice here – using a paratactic sentence for the phrase “life’s tough” – might make the reader consider what has made the narrator believe this: while the narrator intends to give the children a tough life-lesson, the reader is left to question what has been so “tough” in the narrator’s life to make her act this way. The fourth stanza again reiterates the sense of her coldness - she is “standing alone amongst lumps of snow”, her sociopathy – she is “sick of the world” – and her violent tendencies – she “booted the snowman repeatedly. The paratactic sentences like “again” show that her state of mind is confused and incoherent. Duffy may have ended this poem like this as she wants reader and people in society to take a look at why people may commit crimes. Rather than looking at the consequences they should look at the root causes of social exclusion. Her suggestion seems to be that if society were to provide something constructive perhaps artistic - as a means to redirect and channel young people's energies, many later problems such as criminal activity could be avoided. The sentence “You at the zero-end, me with the spool of tape” has been used to represent his relationship with his mother. However the fact that she is holding the “zero” shows that she is The most powerful image, though, is the twin metaphor of the “anchor” and “kite”, which has been used to show that no matter what, you need a counterweight. Just as a kite AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier experienced at this stage of a mother and son relationship. person’s arms, you need the help of another. The second being metaphorical, Armitage is suggesting that, in moments when life is testing or ‘measuring’ you or when you are encountering unknown realms of life, you will always need someone alongside you. In addition Armitage describes his room to be metaphorically as big as “acres” and “prairies” to show that while he has moved on and is free to explore, the vastness of the venture is somewhat daunting. ‘Kid’ Simon Armitage ‘Homecoming’ Simon Armitage Simon Armitage’s poetry, by contrast, often explores and critiques the fine details of human relationships as they change and develop through our lives. Simon Armitage’s poetry, by contrast, often explores and critiques the fine details of human relationships as they change and develop The complex poem ‘Homecoming’, for example, starts with two conflicting images: a trust exercise and the soiling of a Just as in [Havisham, Sonnet 130, The Laboratory, Stealing, depending on which ones you’ve written about], not going to be moving but he is. This then could connote him moving on in life and show he is gradually gaining independence. Also her holding the “zero” shows that she will always be the origin of him, to which he will always be connected. The “spool of tape” is like an umbilical cord that, ultimately, must be cut if he is to live his own life. needs an anchor if it is not to merely float away, an anchor needs something to anchor: as such the parentchild relationship is symbiotic and mutually beneficial. The metaphor of the “call box” can be explained as the narrator telling her that, even though she had no one to call – in other words to To conclude, Armitage’s subtle use of contrasting metaphors, complex time structures, and a reflective tone makes this one of the AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier ‘Hitcher’ Simon Armitage through our lives. “canary-yellow jacket”. Mother gets angry with the daughter for getting her jacket dirty. This suggests that their relationship is lacking trust. They have a feud, child gets angry and shouts back at her mother. The metaphor at the end of the poem describes a man – the narrator - who has “caught” her and is now her “jacket”. This has been done to show that she now has a person that she can trust and rely on. As in several other poems in the Anthology, Simon Armitage dramatises the ways in which people often attempt to resolve their internal conflict through violence inflicted on others. In particular, ‘Hitcher’ is a critique of the commodified world and the way in which it enslaves people to the notion that the only way to get ahead is through aggression, and the best way to resolve conflict is through violence. Armitage uses colour imagery to explore a range of conflicting emotions. The colour of the “canaryyellow cotton jacket”, for instance, symbolises fragility and innocence; just as it becomes “blackened” by the incident at school, so the girl’s relationship with her family is blackened” by the loss of trust her parents show. Armitage also uses primary colours – “You seeing red. Blue murder. Bed.” – to demonstrate how primal and how vivid are the emotions that flow in her childhood household. For example the adjective “tired” in Armitage’s description of the narrator as “tired, under the weather” is used to describe the consequences of working long hours in an anonymous office job. Armitage also used the brand name “ansaphone” to emphasise the narrator’s enclosure within an increasingly commodified society; this trust – when she was young, she can now “call upon” him in her adult life. He will be there to “catch” her, and embrace her with the warmth of the canaryyellow jacket. most moving and affecting poems in the Anthology. Also the paratactic sentence “fired” is used to show the bluntness with which people are treated in a commodified world. The first stanza is juxtaposed with the second in the way that it makes readers aware that “the truth [is] blowin’ in the wind”: the fact that Armitage has used a sentence like this creates a link with Bob Dylan’s song The narrator is aware of the difference between these two lifestyles. He responds with violence, hitting him with a “krooklok” - another representative of the commodified world, which has forced this man to become a pressurised and violent person. That he looks in a metaphorical “mirror” reinforces Armitage’s powerfully AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier ‘My Last Duchess’ Robert Browning Robert Browning’s ‘My Last Duchess’, on the other hand, constitutes a critique of both the abuses of power he saw in aristocratic nineteenth century society, and also the patriarchal structures therein. Browning’s dramatic monologues are especially highly regarded for the way in which their ‘true’ meaning is contrary to the explicit testimony of his monologists. He often uses techniques of language, metre, and syntax in order to develop a two-level system of the implicit and the explicit. machine, a representative of the commercial world, is personified with the harsh verb “screaming” to show the pressure he is under. and the protest movement in general, suggesting the possibility of a life beyond the commodified world the narrator lives in. made point that we need to ‘reflect’ on our own lives before criticising the lives of others. For instance, in ‘My Last Duchess’, disjunctures in the iambic pentameter often coincide with apertures into the mind of the murderous, controlling Duke. The lexical stress of the word ‘Looking’ is trochaic, which conflicts with the underlying iambic pentameter suggested by the syntactical stress pattern of the first line. The effect of this is to emphasise this word and establish quickly and implicitly that the Duchess is dead and so to begin an exploration of the theme of appearances. Later in the poem, the Duke’s jealousy is encapsulated in his suspicions that her “looks went everywhere”, while he believes that appearances – his Royal name in particular – ought to mean everything. The Duke, having bestowed on her a “gift of a ninehundred-years-old name”, refuses to “stoop” to the level of criticising her seemingly flirtatious behaviour and, in choosing “never to stoop”, has her killed: “this grew; I gave commands; / Then all smiles topped together”. Browning incorporates this revelation at the implicit level, using paratactic sentences to suggest the summary judgement of the Duke’s rage – opposing the seeming length of “this This gives another dimension to the ways in which the poets in the anthology engage with ideas of [women in society / violent behaviour / interpersonal relationships / whatever else the question asks for]: in this case, Browning has brought in the idea of how class structures can affect [women in society / violent behaviour / interpersonal relationships / whatever else the question asks for] and ought therefore to be challenged at a political level. AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier grew” – and the force of his action. ‘The Laboratory’ Robert Browning Robert Browning’s ‘The Laboratory’, on the other hand, constitutes a critique of both the abuses of power he saw in aristocratic nineteenth century society, and also how the patriarchal structures therein affect the mental state of women. At various stages throughout the poem, Browning uses variations around a dactylic trimeter to emphasise certain ideas. For example, in the second stanza, the thought process of the monologist – an aristocratic woman who feels she has been betrayed by her lover - is captured in the line “He is with her, and they know that I know”. The stresses fall on the pronouns “he” and “her”, and the repeated verb “know”: the effect of this is to draw attention to the narrator’s obsession with her former lover, his supposed mistress, and her own knowledge of this relationship. Her obsession with the couple is matched by her glamorisation of the process through which the poison is being made, and Browning again uses the metre to show this in the line “Grind away, moisten and mash up thy paste”, in which verbs associated with the semantic field of the “devil’s smithy” are stressed. However, when in the sixth stanza, the monologist turns to the detail of her rival’s death, she relishes each body part that will die one by one; Browning emphasises the gruesomeness of this mental state by changing the stress pattern to anapaestic tetrameter, with stress falling on the body parts and the word “death”: “And her breast and her This glamorisation, as in [whichever other poems you’ve mentioned colour in], is encapsulated in colour imagery: before its creation, the monologist reflects upon the beauty of the “gold oozing” and “exquisite blue” of the poison as she imagines it. She is ultimately disappointed, however, by how “grim” the potion is in reality: she wishes for this moment to be “brighter” and her revenge to be sweet and “enticing”. Browning’s critique, centred on what he saw as the abuses of power of the aristocratic class of his age, is contained in the image of “carry[ing] pure death in an earring, a casket, / A signet, a fan-mount, a filigree basket!” The narrator’s sense of her own wealth and power are conflated in this image, as she combines ideas of glamour, symbols of wealth, and her freedom, as she sees it, to commit murder. This might be compared with [whichever of Hitcher, Havisham, My Last Duchess you have written about], in the sense that the poet is exploring the relationship between violence and power structures in society. AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier arms and her hands, should drop dead”. ‘Sonnet 130’ William Shakespeare As the most celebrated exponent of the sonnet, Shakespeare is synonymous with this form of love poetry. Nevertheless, in Sonnet 130, he subverts the conventions of the sonnet form, including the traditional iambic pentameter and hyperbolic declarations of love…. ….in order to both demonstrate the truth of his love for his mistress, and also to avoid belying his “love with false compare” in the way habitually practised by other contemporary sonneteers. For instance, the alternating rhyming couplet “Coral is far more red than her lips red/ ... / If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head” situates his description of his mistress within the lexical field of colour; however, Shakespeare does not use this imagery to emphasise her physical beauty as he does in, for instance, Sonnet 73, but instead appears to criticise her by highlighting her superficial, visible flaws. While the traditional underlying stress pattern of iambic pentameter runs throughout the whole poem, however, there are instances of disjuncture in both these lines: the trochaic lexical stress of the word ‘Coral’, for example, conflicts with the iambic syntactic stress of the line to draw attention to his subversion of the traditional metre, and his refusal to conform to the traditional romantic theme of the sonnet form. Similarly, the seemingly insulting description of his mistress’ hair as “black wires” forms another disjuncture as its lexical stress is spondaic; the effect here is to heighten the force of the seeming insult. As the poem approaches the volta, however, the reader begins to realise that this apparently offensive piece is in fact a critique of the falsity and pretence of other sonneteers: while he is unprepared to claim that his mistress is a “goddess”, he nevertheless believes his “love as rare as any she belied with false compare”. Once again, Shakespeare embodies this subversion in his metrical trickery: the word “heaven” contains an additional syllable, which draws close attention to the divine and otherworldly condition of his love, no matter how ‘human’ his mistress truly is. AQA Literature Poems: Higher Tier ‘On My First Sonne’ Ben Jonson Another poem in which the poet subverts conventions of the traditional sonnet form for effect is Ben Jonson’s ‘On My first Sonne’, written by the poet in memory of his seven year old son whose death he is grieving. Throughout the poem, Jonson’s vivid religious imagery invites the reader to engage with his attempts to rationalise his son’s death alongside his faith and his need to assuage his guilt. The poem largely conforms to the typical sonnet form in the sense that it is generally in lines of iambic pentameter, and also engages with the theme of love. However, Jonson forgoes the traditional fourteen-line structure of a sonnet by ending the poem after just twelve; this could connote that due to his son’s life being shortened, the poem’s structure ought to echo this foreshortening. Moreover, in the third line, the trochaic lexical stress of the word ‘seven’ conflicts with the syntactic stress, thereby disrupting the underlying iambic pentameter: Jonson does this to emphasise how sorrowful it was that his son died so young, while also providing a phonic echo with the word ‘heaven’, thereby echoing the religious theme of the poem. The poem’s theme of rationalisation originates in Jonson’s feeling that he has ‘sinned’ by having had “too much hope” of his son and now must ‘repay’ his debt to God in the form of his son’s life. Jonson begins to rationalise his grief, however, through the rhetorical question of: “For why / Will man lament the state he should envie? / To have so soon 'scap'd world's and flesh's rage”. This image suggests that Jonson is trying to convince himself that his son has gone to a better place and will no longer have to suffer in the way that Jonson himself is right now. Whether this rationalisation will ultimately provide Jonson with the “soft peace” he needs is, nevertheless, questionable: his determination to “never like too much” anything that he loves seems pitiable, but also self-pitying. The reader is ultimately left feeling sympathy for Jonson, and concern for whether his “vowes” will enable him to overcome his grief.