Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Poppies by Jane Weir
- Hannah Ao
- by Jane Weir
- Context
- Grew up in Italy and England
- She is a textile designer and a poet
- lots of imagery of textiles in Poppies
- Poppies; Armistice Sunday began as
marking the end of the first world
war, so people could remember all
the men that gave their lives. Now
it is used to remember those who
died in all wars since then.
- Form
- The form is a dramatic monologue
- Dramatic monologue - the poet takes
on the persona of a character and
addresses, a silent listener, the son.
- Why a dramatic monologue?
- Emphasises the pain caused for the
often ignored mother
- About those left behind
- Emphasises the fact the son is not
there. He's not responding because
he's not there, or he's at war or dead
- Structure
- Free verse
- No specific rhyme scheme or structure
- stanzas all have totally different lengths.
- Enjambment
- "All my words/flattened, rolled, turned into felt, /new stanza/ slowly melting."
- structure breaks, reflects how the mother is breaking emotionally.
- caesura
- Chaotic structure in total
- This reflects the effect conflict has on
those who are left at home, their lives
are chaotic and disorderly like the
structure. Everything is disorganised due
to the terror in their thoughts about
their loved ones fighting at war.
- Language
- Domestic Language
- She uses very domestic, everyday, ordinary language and enfuses in it rich
imagery with similies, metaphors