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    Lament by Gillian Clarke

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    Gilian Clarke-Lament Student’s Worksheet Activity one * Name: Gillian Clarke Nationality: Cardiff‚ Wales * Family life: She has a daughter and two sons‚ Professional activities/jobs: She was and now lives with her husband (who is an poet‚ playwright‚ editor‚ translator arquitect) on a smallholding in Ceredigion‚ President

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    Essay on Lament by Clarke

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    Essay on “Lament” Re-read the poem “Lament” by Gillian Clarke and explore the way in which the author resorts to words and phrases to make this poem effective and memorable. “Lament” by Gillian Clarke is a memorable and effective poem due to the poet’s resorting to specific words and phrases. The poet uses lots of metaphors to achieve her objective. For example‚ “her pulsing burden” is a metaphor referring to the turtle’s need of a place to discharge her eggs and how she sees pregnancy

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    Lament Imagery Analysis Kautilya Palaypu Gillian Clarke‚ the writer of Lament‚ uses imagery in his poem in the form of animals and nature to express the consequence of war and greed on the innocent. He uses nature imagery to show that the very thing that was meant to nurture us is being destroyed. Clarke uses imagery to mourn the destruction of the innocent and nature. He also uses imagery to show how appalling the consequences of human nature are to its surroundings. Clarke explains that “for

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    Lament

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    Lament by Gillian Clark is a poetry that summarizes the sadness and loss of the people from the gulf war. Lament means ’sad and despair’. Clark has used a lot of language techniques to convey her thoughts on the gulf war. Some techniques was: she uses anaphora of the word ’for’ which is used a lot at the start of each line‚ the use of personification and the description of the war through an animal’s point of view. Also‚ the last line is the most important line of the whole poetry. The anaphora

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    Lament

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    Molly Clayton Instructor: Roselyn Siphengphone College Writing 24 February 2015 Lament Lament is an under appreciated concept and practice in the typical evangelical Christian liturgy and imagination. It may be under appreciated because it is understood as harsh or abrasive language towards God. This may in turn lead one to think that lament is expressing unbelief. Alternatively‚ lament may be under appreciated because joy is emphasized in evangelical Christianity. Though this emphasis is certainly

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    The Anglo-Saxon poem‚ “The Wife’s Lament” is written in a first person narrative‚ which gives it more depth than if it had been simply written in the third. The poem is the lament of a titular wife because she is “tortured by the anguish of exile” (5). She feels forsaken by her lord‚ who she also refers to as her husband‚ who has left her alone to sail the ocean blue. Even though the author is unknown‚ it is my impression that the poem was written by a woman because of the intuitive way in which

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    Analysis of “The Wife’s Lament” The Wife’s Lament by an anonymous Anglo-Saxon scop. The literary work is contained in The Exeter Book. This elegy explores the concept of exile‚ sorrow‚ helplessness‚ betrayal‚ loneliness‚ and confusion. The speaker of this elegy will speak about how she is out to search for a way to relieve her pain. She feels alone and ignored‚ and she just wants to be happy and not sad. The first section is when the speaker talks about how her pain and hardship in the past‚ is

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    Ibáñez Sagasti Year 11 Visual analysis of the poem “Lament” by Gillian Clarke In the poem ‘Lament’ the poet is talking about war and other disasters‚ created by man‚ which destroys the world. “Lament” is an elegy‚ an expression of grief. It can be a sad‚ military tune played on a bugle. She is talking about how the animals are affected and she uses them as a device for empathy from the reader. Even in the title she is starting with a gloomy picture. “Lament” means the expression of pain or

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    Lament Poem

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    The poem “Lament”‚ written by Gillian Clarke‚ is an elegy‚ an expression of grief that appeals to the reader for them to react to human mistakes which are damaging our planet. The poem is lay out in seven stanzas of 3-line each (triplets)‚ each of them very well defined and concentrated in a different complaint. The rhyme is quick due to the constant repetition of the word ‘for’ in the beginning of each stanza. The sentences in the poem lack of subject‚ so we can consider that these are written

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    Lament - Techniques

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    Lament focuses on the destructive nature of war. Gillian Clarke conveys this by using a large amount of personification‚ irony‚ contrast‚ metaphor and connotative language to describe the negative impact on the environment and people that is caused by war. The authors tone is very angry and sad and brings out emotions of sorrow and despair in the reader with imagery of death. Gillian Clarke uses personification with the environment to describe the effect the war has had on it. The "ocean’s lap"

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