Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Horses Poem â⬠Edwin Muir Essay
ââ¬Å"Horsesâ⬠  Edwin Muir  in First Poems, 1925  Notes Compiled and Edited by RI  First Reading  â⬠¢ The sight of horses now, in the present, leads theà  speaker to consider his feelings towards horsesà  when he was a child: ââ¬ËPerhaps some childish hourà  has come againââ¬â¢.  â⬠¢ Main focus:  ââ¬â The various descriptions of horses and the speakerââ¬â¢s  feelings towards the horses  ââ¬â An other-worldliness about them, something magical  ââ¬â Admiration and fear are mixed  ââ¬â A clear Romantic feel about the poem: e.g. ââ¬ËAnd oh  the raptureâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢  Stanza 1  â⬠¢ ââ¬Ëlumberingââ¬â¢ gives the impression that theà  horses are moving in a slow, heavy andà  awkward way  Stanza 2  â⬠¢ Pistons in the machines in an ancient mill areà  used to describe the movement of the horsesââ¬â¢Ã  hooves as the child ââ¬Ëwatched fearfulââ¬â¢  â⬠¢ The use of imagery drawn from the earlyà  industrial age is interesting in what it tells usà  about the childââ¬â¢s fear  Stanza 3  â⬠¢ The word ââ¬Ëconqueringââ¬â¢ suggests a reference toà  an even earlier age  â⬠¢ The word ââ¬Ëritualââ¬â¢ and the descriptionsà  Ã¢â¬Ëseraphim of goldââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëecstatic monstersââ¬â¢ hintà  at something pagan or pre-historic  Stanza 4  â⬠¢ The ââ¬Ëraptureââ¬â¢ conveys a Romantic sense ofà  worshipping these natural creatures: see lines  2ââ¬â4  Stanza 5  â⬠¢ ââ¬Ëglowing with mysterious fireââ¬â¢ links with theà  Ã¢â¬Ëmagic powerââ¬â¢, which describes the horses heà  sees in the present day (in the first stanza)  Stanza 6  â⬠¢ The powerful force of the horses is captured inà  the eyes gleaming with a ââ¬Ëcruel apocalypticà  lightââ¬â¢  â⬠¢ The religious imagery follows on from theà  Ã¢â¬Ëstruggling snakesââ¬â¢ of stanza 5  Stanza 7  â⬠¢ The repetition of ââ¬Ëit fadesââ¬â¢ suggests loss,à  straightforwardly the fading of his memory  â⬠¢ ââ¬ËPineââ¬â¢ means to feel a lingering, often nostalgic  desire  Exercises  â⬠¢ To assist a closer reading of the poem as a  whole  Stanza 1  â⬠¢ Task 1  ââ¬â Look up the meaning of ââ¬Ëlumberingââ¬â¢ and then  consider the way it contrasts with the description  in lines 3 ââ¬â 4  Stanza 1  â⬠¢ Task 2  ââ¬â Look closely at the meanings of ââ¬Ëterribleââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëwildââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëstrangeââ¬â¢  ââ¬â These are of course words common in everydayà  usage, but precise dictionary definitions of theseà  words might yield unexpected and original ideas  ââ¬â Note that the horses are ââ¬Ëlumberingââ¬â¢, whilst theà  plough is ââ¬Ësteadyââ¬â¢  Stanza 2  â⬠¢ Check that you have understood the shift inà  time.  â⬠¢ The rest of the poem deals with the speakerââ¬â¢sà  recollection of his feelings as a child.  â⬠¢ What impression do you feel is created by theà  simile of the ââ¬Ëpistonsââ¬â¢?  Stanza 3  â⬠¢ The references in this stanza are to a preindustrial age. â⬠¢ Consider the effects of these words:  ââ¬Ëconquering hoovesââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëritualââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëseraphim of goldââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëmute ecstatic monstersââ¬â¢.  â⬠¢ You should consult a dictionary where  appropriate.  Stanzas 4 and 5  â⬠¢ What do you make of the tone in stanza four?  â⬠¢ Explore the words used to describe the horses,à  and to consider what they reveal about theà  speakerââ¬â¢s attitude?  â⬠¢ What contrast is signalled by the use of ââ¬ËBut whenà  at duskâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬â¢ at the beginning of stanza five?  â⬠¢ What do you make of ââ¬Ëmysterious fireââ¬â¢ here andà  the ââ¬Ëmagic powerââ¬â¢ attributed to the present-dayà  horses in stanza one?  Stanza 6  â⬠¢ Analyse the effectiveness of the imagery: the  ââ¬Ëcruel apocalyptic lightââ¬â¢ of their eyes and the  personification of the wind.  Stanza 7  â⬠¢ Before considering the final stanza and  reaching a judgement about its effectiveness,  you might read the whole poem (perhaps  working in pairs).  â⬠¢ Having studied closely the previous stanzas,  how do you now feel that the final stanza  should be spoken?  â⬠¢ How does the tone here differ from the tone  in other parts of the poem?  Activities  â⬠¢ In order focus on the sounds of the poem, you  might in pairs or small groups practise reading  the poem aloud.  â⬠¢ Try to capture a suitable voice for the speaker as  you read, and vary the tone as appropriate.  â⬠¢ Finally, annotate a copy of the poem, indicating  briefly the effects created by imagery and sound  devices  â⬠¢ Select an example of a device used in a  particularly striking or vivid way; explain what it is  that makes it striking for you.  Thematic links with set poems  â⬠¢ Nature: Pied Beauty, Hunting Snake, Pike, The  Woodspurge, Upon Westminster Bridge,  Summer Farm  â⬠¢ Time: A Different History, The Cockroach, The  City Planners, The Planners  Summary  â⬠¢ Past memories  â⬠¢ Surpassing reality  â⬠¢ The poet reminiscing one of his childhood  memories:  ââ¬â Horses ploughing during a rainy day  Power of Nature  â⬠¢ Expression of the power of nature  â⬠¢ Language techniques  ââ¬â Simile  ââ¬â The ââ¬Å"mechanicalâ⬠ metaphor  ââ¬â Oxymoron  ââ¬â Negative connotations  Vocabulary of nature  â⬠¢ Horses  â⬠¢ Field  â⬠¢ Blackening  rain  â⬠¢ Hooves  â⬠¢ Stubble  â⬠¢ Hulks  â⬠¢ Monsters  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  Sun  Light  Bossy sides  Flakes  Snakes  Dusk  Gloam  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  â⬠¢  Fire  Bodies  Mire  Eyes  Night  Manes  Wind  Country  Tree  Figurative Language  â⬠¢ Similes  ââ¬â Hooves  â⬠¢ ââ¬Ëlike pistons in an ancient millââ¬â¢  ââ¬â Image:  à » Their hooves are like machines  à » They keep on moving up and down, ploughing the whole  field  â⬠¢ Struggling snakes ââ¬â Snake-like furrows  ââ¬â Prepares us for the biblical imagery  à » ââ¬Ëcruel apocalyptic lightââ¬â¢  â⬠¢ Eyes  ââ¬â As brilliant and as wide as night  Personification  â⬠¢ Wind  Their manes the leaping ire of the wind  Lifted with rage invisible and blind  â⬠¢ Dusk  â⬠¢ The broad-breasted horses in the light of the  setting sun  â⬠¢ The light coming off of their bodies in flakes  â⬠¢ The steaming nostrils  â⬠¢ Their warm, gigantic bodies glowing with  mysterious fire  â⬠¢ The smouldering heat of their bodies in the cold  mud  â⬠¢ Metaphors  ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Conqueringâ⬠  ââ¬â ââ¬Å"Great hulksâ⬠  â⬠¢ Mechanical  â⬠¢ Industrial age  â⬠¢ Comparing a horseââ¬â¢s power to that of an engine  ââ¬â E.g. car engine  ââ¬â Reader can visualize and sense the physical power of the animal  ââ¬â Powerful image of the horses  ââ¬â Appreciation of the beauty of the powerful force of the horses  â⬠¢ Oxymoron  ââ¬â Horses described as ââ¬Ëmute ecstatic monsters on  the mouldââ¬â¢  ââ¬â Horses being presented as ââ¬Ëterrible, so wild and  strangeââ¬â¢, yet with ââ¬Ëmagical powerââ¬â¢  ââ¬â Leading the reader to ponder the poetââ¬â¢s message:  â⬠¢ The idea of nature fading away and life becoming  mechanical  ââ¬â Followed by the disclosure of his dislike of modernisation  â⬠¢ Negative connotations  ââ¬â Dark side and despair  â⬠¢ Through negative connotations  ââ¬â The ââ¬Å"smoulderingâ⬠ bodies of the horses  à » Their eyes gleaming with a ââ¬Å"cruel apocalyptic lightâ⬠  â⬠¢ Here the poet expresses his emotions towards  the arrival of evil, or apocalypse and his world  turning dark  The right words  â⬠¢ First half of the poem  ââ¬â Words like ââ¬Å"seraphimâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"goldâ⬠  â⬠¢ Emphasis on strong presence and value in nature  â⬠¢ End of the poem  ââ¬â ââ¬Å"black fieldâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"still-standing treeâ⬠  â⬠¢ The poet introduces a dark, sad tone  ââ¬â As he expresses his realisation  à » faded nature  à » loss of its presence  Conclusion  â⬠¢ Memory  ââ¬â Struggle  â⬠¢ Light and darkness  â⬠¢ Symbolic  ââ¬â Expresses aspects of nature  â⬠¢ Wildness  â⬠¢ Innocence    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.