Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin Poetry Mindmap
- Street
- Text
- Short
- three stanzas
- leaves the reader with questions
- base of narrative is simple, however the message and details are enigmatic
- Lyrical
- Third person
- reminiscent of a myth or folk-tale
- "the butcher's daughter" lends itself to folk-style story telling
- trail of blood (fairy tale-esque)
- Tone
- Dream-like
- like a nightmare
- suspenseful
- vague
- never mentions the word "blood"
- Tense
- Enjambment and run on sentences
- sense of urgency
- intrigued, immersed and seduced
- following her
- Utilises contrasts
- "Dangling" knife
- Playful/deadly
- Duality of the butcher
- Suffering for animal/sustenance for the townspeople
- Female Butcher
- Femininity/power & slaughter
- White trousers
- Innocence & purity / livelihood is killing
- The Bend In The Road
- Text
- three stanzas
- Begins in third person
- progresses to plural first person
- personal poem
- symbolism
- nature waits for the family
- "nothing moved"
- the spot where the child was sick becomes important in the poet's understanding of the impermanence of life
- plants are slowly, inexorably growing and moving.
- becomes a repository of family memories
- air
- cumulus cloud
- Tone
- mystery
- consoling
- nostalgia
- The Second Voyage
- humour
- odysseus
- epic, conversing with oar
- personification
- arrogant
- comedic fig
- confined landscape/boundless sea
- challenge/freedom
- odysseus cannot abandon
- transition
- change
- obstacles
- journey
- odyssey
- rich, sensuous imagery
- Fireman's Lift
- dying mother
- lifted by angels
- passed to safety
- powerless/powerful
- connects virgin mary to mother
- vivid imagery of fresco
- connects visual art to spirituality
- heavy symbolism use
- Translation
- symbols
- complex
- keys
- who has 'em?
- atmosphere
- in the laundry
- deep detailed imagery
- harshness
- grinding
- rotten teeth
- skull blared
- sharp as an infant's cry
- steam giggled and danced, not the women
- alliteration - energy
- blinded and bleached
- glance.. giggled
- danced..drains
- lines become fragmented in third stanza
- reflects fragmented lives
- To Niall Woods and Xenya Ostrovskaia, married in
Dublin on September 2009
- conversational in style
- deceptively simple
- many layers
- awe wonder
- fairytales
- The poet refers to a fairy tale in which three sons are given the choice of setting out on a journey with a
full loaf of bread and his mother’s curse, or half a loaf and her blessing. The youngest son chooses the
half loaf and the blessing, and his journey ends in the traditional ‘happy ever after’ ending
- links cultures
- The story of ‘the firebird that stole the golden apples’ is a Russian tale in which a tsar promises wealth
and marriage to his daughter to anyone who can stop the firebird from stealing the apples from his
orchard. After a difficult and dangerous mission, a young man called Ivan succeeds and gets his reward.
The Irish story of the King of Ireland’s son has a slightly different message in that the young man first
wins but then loses a beautiful young woman, Fedelma. The message here might be that the couple
must be attentive to one another and not take their love for granted.
- love is wonderful, not easy to win
- The final line of the poem reinforces the joyful blessing
- happily ever after