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A Narrow Fellow in the Grass

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A Narrow Fellow in the Grass
Identify | Technique | Analyse | Evaluate | Conceptualise | Appreciate | “A narrow fellow in the grass / Occasionally rides. / You may have met him – did you not? / His notice sudden is.” | Lexical choice – unusual choice of verb.Modal verbDirect addressParadox | Ride – being carried by the grass, something other-worldly or ghostly about this snake – being propelled magically. Only happens occasionally – a special/ rare/unique/mysterious occasion. Fellow – such a common address – paradoxical idea – both common and mysterious | May – most people miss this connection – allude to the infrequency of the moment. Some possibility – far from certain – writer of the poem has a stronger connection to nature than the average person. | Most people lack the belonging of experiencing the rare/unique/special/ mysterious/ striking moments with nature (which is the snake in the poem). | Not everyone is as attuned to this fleeting moment with nature. | “The grass divides as with a comb, / A spotted shaft is seen, / And then it closes at your feet / And opens further on.” | Religious allusionAlliteration | This encounter is both ordinary (you see a snake, and then don’t see it) and extraordinary (it represents beauty/ nature etc). It = grass. | You see the spotted shaft and there is a brief moment that precedes full recognition of what it really is. | Nature is both divine and mysterious. Therefore EDick finds it preferable – she finds everything she wants in nature. | Nature goes on, it isn’t trying to connect or be friends, it goes on. | “He likes a boggy acre, / A floor too cool for corn, / Yet when a boy and barefoot, / I more than once at noon” | Verisimilitude EnjambmentImagery | The snake likes a cool environment, so this is why the encounter is so rare.Boy and barefoot – touch of reality. | Deliberate attempt to give something the quality of being realistic – boy running around barefoot in a snakey field. | Boy belonging to nature – running around barefoot in the

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