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ELEMENTS OF ANALYSIS | DESCRIPTION |
Looking Closer at Craftsmanship
The diagram below shows another approach you may wish to take:

Sample Poems
Sample Year 9 Response to Poetry:“It was a Long Time Ago” | |
Written Analysis | Elements of Analysis |
"It Was Long Ago", a simple poem by Eleanor Farjeon, records the poet's earliest memory, an incident that occurred when she was around three years old. While she was walking along a dusty road, she saw an old lady sitting under a tree. The lady invited her over and gave her bilberries and cream to eat, a 'feast' that the poet recalls with pleasure.
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At first glance the poem may appear to have no serious purpose other than the, recording of an early memory, but the last lines suggest some additional significance. The poet shows that this simple, pleasant memory means much to her because, 'then I grew up, you see'. We are reminded that 'growing up' is not always so pleasant. Sadly, being an adult can sometimes dull us so that we no longer appreciate the simple pleasures of life.
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The poem is gentle and nostalgic. It seeks not only to recreate the scene for the reader, but to have him or her feel the child world goodness of the incident. The poet begins by asking our permission: 'I shall tell you, shall I, something I remember?' In the manner of a small child, she regularly checks to see that we are attending, that we understand: 'You know'; 'You see'. Thus the poem has a confiding, warm feel to it.
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The poem has an interesting, simple structure built around three line stanzas. Has the poet deliberately used three line stanzas as the most appropriate for a three year old? At any rate, the simple structure is certainly appropriate for the situation. Similarly the language and rhyming scheme are deliberately simple. Words are uncomplicated, tending to be single syllables, with considerable repetition of words. The first line in every stanza ends with the word 'remember', and there are only two other thyme sounds 'ee' and 'oh', used absolutely regularly throughout the poem. The rhythm is gentle and slow, appropriate to the subject matter. Such structural economy and simplicity form a very appropriate vehicle with which to recreate a childhood memory.
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Throughout the recreation, the poet seeks to involve our senses. She introduces concrete objects ('a mountain, an old house, and a tree'), and simple colours ('in a red shawl with a grey cat'), to help us visualise the scene. She invites us to hear the memory ('and while she hummed, and the cat purred'), to taste it ('...the taste of berries'), and feel it ('the feel of the sun I remember') as she draws upon her own sense memories. Thus, the memory is evoked for us in a much clearer way.
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Through the pet's skill in using appropriately simple words, structure and rhythm, to recreate her earliest memory, she successfully involves us in the poem. For all its simplicity, the poem has a gentle robustness to it. We share the uncluttered goodness of the incident and are left with some wistful longings for our own childhood.
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Sample Poem 2
Read “The African Beggar” below and try your hand at analysing the poem.
Sample Analysis to “The African Beggar” |
Tone: repulsion; dislike. Then changes to pity; sympathy
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Mood: futility; desolation |
Theme: desolation of humanity's subsistence: the utter helplessness of humanity in the face of adversity, as well as our own neglect of self and others |
Stanza One: |
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| "sprawled in the dust..." —› beggar is treated immediately like a thing that has been thrown out - suggests shabby, lawless being. |
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| "target..." —› (metaphor) beggar continues to be described as a thing - a convenience for others to use; singled out as an object for attack. "Dogs" and "flies" solidly establishes sub-human existence of beggar; "flies" suggest filth, a disease. That he is a target suggests his passiveness and helplessness. |
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| "heap of verminous rags and matted hair" —› (metaphor) image of beggar is sustained as a thing : "verminous" is associated with the "flies", "matted hair: is associated with filth, dust, neglect of physical hygiene. |
| "he watches with cunning reptile eyes" —› (metaphor) a dramatic contrast: how can an inhuman bag of bones be capable of subtle and crafty scheming? Likened to an image of a "reptile" - like a snake, he watches, waiting for his prey. The pronoun "he" is used to remind us that this is a person and our revulsion is emphasised, for how can a human being be like this? |
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| "noseless, smallpoxed face creased in a sneer" —›"noseless", "smallpoxed" suggests disease, leprosy which adds to the beggars repulsiveness. "Sneer" carries suggestion of the cunning reptile. To "sneer" shows arrogance. |
Stanza Two: |
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| "yellow stumps of teeth" —› (metaphor) physical ugliness is emphasised; "yellow" is colour of disease and decay, rotten. Image of "stumps" is more appropriate for an animal than a human being. |
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| "whines" —› (metaphor) cringing sound associated with animals. |
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| "perceiving that we bear the curse of pity" —› poet leaves the description of the beggar and comments on the general attitude to poverty and disease. "The curse of pity" : "curse" suggests bad; "pity" suggests "good". We don't want to know about it, but if we do we should show pity and offer our help. |
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| "grotesque mask of death" —› (metaphor) physical deformity and sub-human existence of beggar is emphasised. How can this thing/animal be really alive? "Mask of death" symbolises the "face of death" - an image of death staring at us. |
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| "with hands like claws about his begging bowl" —› (simile) image is of a skeleton; death-like hands clinging to his only source of existence (the begging bowl). |
Stanza Three: |
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| "lying all alone" —› no longer "sprawled" but "lying" on the ground. The tone here is one of quietness - "all alone" suggests that he is no longer the target for others. It is the time to be aware of his suffering. |
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| "shadow of a crumbling wall" —› "shadow" suggests absence of light; darkness. Image of loneliness with the shadow of death near. "crumbling" suggests decay and ruin; the lack of a home. |
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| "lost in the trackless jungle of his pain" —› (metaphor) pain racks his entire body, so much that it consumes his total energy. "Trackless jungle" suggests the amount of pain - endless - filling and crammed into every part of his body. No escape from this pain. |
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| "clutching the pitiless red earth in vain" —› (personification) "clutching" suggests the beggar's desperation. "Red" personifies the blood of life, nourishment, energy and strength, and "earth" is the sole source of humanity's existence. Even the earth is without pity. All "in vain" - there is no solution, no help. |
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| "whimpering like a stricken animal" —› (simile) emphasises the beggar's total suffering; his total defeat. |
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this is really helpful bit cold you please comment on the analysis of the planners by Margaret Atwood?
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