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Havisham

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Havisham
Carol Ann Duffy writes from the viewpoint of one of Charles’ Dickens most memorable characters, Miss Havisham from Great Expectations. This is a poignant poem when Duffy delves into the bitterness the character feels at being jilted. The title “Havisham” suggests a loss of status and sets the tone for the whole poem.

Stanza 1

The opening line portrays the order of events. “Beloved sweetheart bastard.” The man she describes was someone special but soon became someone she hated. She has longed for revenge as the reader is told, “Not a day since then I haven’t wished for him dead.” The words “prayed” also tie in with this deep seated longing for change. The imagery of her eyes being like “Dark green pebbles” hints to the hardness of stone but also the green is jealousy. She has become trapped by obsession: thinking, praying and waiting for her fiance.

Stanza 2

The word “Spinster” is a one word sentence, almost spat out in distaste. Havisham describes her condition “I stink and remember” the words refer to her smell from wearing the same clothes but also the stench of the terrible thing that has happened to her. The events have changed her and there is real sadness and fear behind the words. Her wedding dress is described as “yellowing” as she questions how she has ended up in this situation.

Stanza 3

The final part of the previous stanza merges into this third verse and the disjointedness reflects Havisham’s own distress. This stanza hints that sometimes she can feel happy and when she is bed asleep for a moment it as if she is still with her lover, but the strong words “bite awake” describe the gnawing pain of having lost a loved one. The dream is only a dream and life is difficult to live with.

Stanza 4

Love is personified and the narrator describes herself as “Love’s hate behind a white veil” Love enjoys hurting her and again this is emphasised with her description of the balloon “bursting in my face.” Balloons are supposed to be fun like

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