Mid-term Break Seamus Heaney’s ‘Mid-Term Break’ is a shocking and heart-rending poem about a schoolboy going through the after effects of the death of his four years old younger brother. It shows the reader the emotions and events that the boy has to go through‚ and explains what the words ‘Mid-term Break’ really mean to the young boy. The narrator is a schoolboy‚ telling us the story of his experiences through the wake‚ remembering every detail and addressing us with every memory and emotion
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in several different ways‚ my first thought was that “Ariel” wanted his poems to show some sort of characteristic that would have them accepted by the world of poetry and poets‚ a world I have difficulty connecting with. “Ariel was glad he had written his poems.” Question: Why did Stevens choose the name Ariel? Digging By Seamus Heaney Observation: There are no women present in the poem. This indicates that the poem reveals the poet’s struggle with masculinity as he diverts from the paths
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“Digging” Analysis In many families‚ fathers take pride in receiving remarks regarding their sons such as “He’s a chip off the ol’ block” or “like father like son‚” often exalting the sons who have followed in their fathers’ vocational footsteps. In “Digging‚” by Seamus Heaney‚ the speaker describes the quintessential potato farming tradition that his father and grandfather partake in‚ while the speaker himself observes through a window barrier. Seamus Heaney‚ through his use of imagery‚ repetition
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There are only a few similarities between ’Afternoons’‚ by Philip Larkin‚ and ’Churning Day’‚ by Seamus Heaney. These feature mainly in the structure of the two poems. They both use enjambment for the whole length of the poem‚ with just one end-stopped line present in each. Enjambment gives both poems a sense of continuous movement. This is appropriate in ’Churning Day’ as it represents the motion of the person churning the butter. It also makes the voice of ’Churning Day’ sound out of breath‚ as
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‘Digging’ and ‘Follower’ In this essay I will be analysing ‘Digging’ and ‘Follower’ both by Seamus Heaney. The poems which relates back to Seamus Heaney’s past memories which he had experienced when he was at a younger age‚ they are memories of him and his father and their relationship. From the poem we can interpret that he was brought up on a potato farm and in many of his other poems he relates to this‚ this suggests that perhaps he is expressing the family’s traditions and enjoyed it. The poem
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This is a poem concerned with Irish history. Looming over the scene depicted is the spectre of the potato famine that afflicted Ireland from 1845-49. The potato crop‚ staple for the Irish‚ failed‚ and with cataclysmic results. About half the population of three million died‚ while a million people emigrated – many to America. The first section of the poem is written in alternately rhymed quatrains that describe a rural scene of potato digging that is clearly in progress much later than a similar
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Level - Paper 2 Total Marks: 200 Wednesday‚ 8 June – Afternoon‚ 1.30 – 4.50 Candidates must attempt the following:• ONE question from SECTION I – The Single Text • ONE question from SECTION II – The Comparative Study • ONE question on the Unseen Poem from SECTION III – Poetry • ONE question on Prescribed Poetry from SECTION III – Poetry N.B. Candidates must answer on Shakespearean Drama. They may do so in SECTION I‚ The Single Text (Hamlet‚ As You Like It) or in SECTION II‚ The Comparative Study
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Seamus Heaney as a poet of Modern Ireland Seamus Heaney epitomizes the dilemma of the modern poet. In his collection of essays ‘Preoccupations’ he embarks on a search for answers to some fundamental questions regarding a poet: How should a poet live and write? What is his relationship to his own voice‚ his own place‚ his literary heritage and his contemporary world? In ‘Preoccupations’ Heaney imagines ‘Digging’ itself as having been ‘dug up’‚ rather than written‚ observing that he has ‘come to realize
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“My Papa’s Waltz” and “Digging” In “My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke and “Digging” by Seamus Heaney‚ both the poems are about the poet’s relationship with their father when they were young. Both fathers work as laborers and both poets appreciates their father for their hard work‚ but they have a distant relationship with them. In “My Papa’s Waltz”‚ the poet mentions that his father’s hand have a battered knuckle on one hand and a palm caked hard by dirt which shows that his father probably
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A Detailed Study on Digging The poem Digging‚ written by the famous Irish poet‚ Seamus Heaney‚ is a descriptive‚ interesting poem about work. It is about the importance of and appreciation of work and family members who work. In the poem‚ Seamus Heaney is paying respect to his father and grandfather who were both potato farmers who worked hard their entire lives. The subject of the poem gives us a sense as to what the poet is really trying to say and get across to the reader about work he has observed
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