Horses - Edwin
Muir
Summary
of the Poem:
A
horse lover (for their majesty and strength) recalls his childhood and his
experience through the industrial revolution.
Structure/
text level analysis
1. Constant
caesura throughout the poem.
a. Illustrates
the poet’s attempt to try and recall the past. Note that there are a lot found
especially towards the beginning of the poem in the first few stanzas of the
poem.
b. “It
fades! It fades!” The use of the “!” is used as an enjambment to demonstrate how much the
poet wishes to continue replaying his memories despite him being unable to do
so. Thus the word “fades”
2. Rhyme
scheme
a. AABB
rhyme scheme throughout, with the exception of the masculine rhyme and the lost
rhyme, which both still are found consecutively.
b. Masculine
rhyme at the last stanza
i. “Pine”, “Crystalline”
ii. Indicates the masculinity and heavy industry usually perceived during
the industrial revolution.
c. Lost
rhyme found in the first and second last stanza.
i. “plough”, “now”
ii. “wind”, “blind”
iii. Demonstrates how that in the end, we get lost in time. These are words
that used to rhyme in Shakesperean times.
3. Time
shift as you continue to read on in the story
a. Medieval
times
i. The bare field
ii. Reference to magic
b. Industrial
period
i. Blackening rain
1. Reference
to soot and air pollution
ii. Childish hour
1. Obviously,
his childhood.
iii. The end of the world
1. The
Rapture
2. The
cruel apocalyptic night
Signs
of literary techniques
1. Similes
a. Helps
the reader to imagine the place described, which allows the reader to empathise
with the poet and see the way he sees the world metaphorically.
b. This
can be an attempt to portray to the reader the horses’ majesty and elegance.
2. Personification
a. Makes
his past look surreal. Indication that his past is probably biased to shift
things in a more positive mood.
b. On
the other hand, it makes the horses look as creatures not of this world but
from probably a world different and even more perfect than the world we live
in.
c. Their
manes the leaping ire of the wind
d. Like
magic power of the stony grange
3. Imagery
a. Biblical
image of the horses
iv. The word “Sacred” in the phrase “were ritual that turned the field to
brown” in the third stanza.
v. The word “Rapture” and “apocalyptic” in the poem.
1. Used
to portray the horses as gods or creatures that were perfectly shaped out of
the image of god. This is obviously a blatant sign of his admiration.
2. The
poet’s use of words describing the end of the world illustrate the poet’s
faith in the horses being able to overcome any obstacle, even the end of the
world and death itself.
b. The
past of the poet
vi. Note that the horses were mentioned all throughout time, giving them an
image of being immortal creatures. They also link with divinity as they are
referred to as creatures that will be in the past, present and the future all
at the same time.
vii. Dreamlike
1. The Country Crystalline.
2. The juxtaposition in “Move up and down, yet seen as
standing still”
3. “Black
field and the still standing trees”
c. Imagery
on the industrial revolution.
4. Repetition
a. “It fades! It fades!” Used to once again exaggerate how much the poet is distressed over the
fact that he is unable to recall the memories of his past once again as it
starts to leave him.
5. Alliteration
a. “country
crystalline”
viii. Crystals are transparent but reflective.
1. Portrays
how much the author vividly remembers certain periods of time in his life but
only in periodicals.
b. “broad-breasted”
c. “Still
standing tree”
d. Note
how these are all alliterations used when describing things, used to exemplify
and accentuate the descriptions from the poet.
6. Metaphor
a. Sinking sun. Fourth
stanza. Another piece of imagery used to represent the Sun setting and the
night coming forth.
Identify
the speaker in the poem: The poet himself, Edwin Muir
Identify
the speaker’s attitude towards the subject of the poem:
The
writer thinks of horses as creatures closest to god and how they are omniscient
in their own special way in his own perspective.
Paired
poems
1. The
Pike, as both poets in this context share a equal respect for their animal of
choice. They describe their animals in their own special way, sometimes
similarly and sometimes differently, which we can address to give contrast and
vice versa.
Memorable
lines
1. “Those
lumbering horses in the steady plough”
“When I watched fearful, through the blackening rain,”
“Their hooves like pistons in an ancient mill”
“And oh the rapture, when, one furrow done”
Sign of a time shift
“When I watched fearful, through the blackening rain,”
“Their hooves like pistons in an ancient mill”
“And oh the rapture, when, one furrow done”
Sign of a time shift
2. ”The
manes the leaping ire of the wind” Personificaton
3. “Ah,
now it fades! It fades!” Enjambment
and Repetition
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