Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Here Be Dragons
- Stanza 1:
- The speaker (a boy) gets access to his
dad's computer & explores the internet
- The boy quickly discovers his dad's computer password & easily gets access to the internet
- And the boy's determined & focused
- Line 1 & 2: "pa se koedwood draf ek in 'n oogwink kaf" (emphasis placed on
"pa" -beginning of line & stanza- emphasizing boy's relationship with his dad)
- Use of English word "surf" prepares us for informal style of language in the poem
- Stanza 2:
- The speaker wants his dad to give him freedom on the internet.
He must overcome dangers like drugs & paedophiles anyway
- "Inligting is my religie" (Information is my religion): Information is compared to religion.
The boy believes in/relies on information as much as some people do in religion.
- "GoogleEarth my kart" (GoogleEarth [is] my map): The boy can find places easily with it
- The boys tells his father that he can also be exposed to dangers not just on the internet
- Weed is easily available on the streets
- Teachers (who should make kids feels
safe) sometimes sexually abuse them
- The boy isn't safe anywhere, so his
dad can't always protect him
- Stanza 3:
- The speaker & his friends are informed because of their
access to the internet. He wants freedom to communicate
with friends in Poland & witches in Paris
- The boy (& his generation) are well informed, mostly
because of their access to the internet & information
- Keyboards are called "wys" (wise): Personification
- They are also metaphors for the speaker & his generation
- The boy wants his dad to let him explore new places through the internet
- Having contact with friends from
other countries via social media
- Meeting strange & unusual people
("hekse" -witches) through the internet
- "Reis" (travel) used metaphorically
- Alliteration of 'P' sound ("Pole" "Parys") emphasizes
distance between those two places & distance
between the places & the boy's boy (South Africa)
- Stanza 4:
- The internet's the only place that can still be
discovered/conquered by the speaker's generation
- Speaker tells his dad that technology is something his generation is proud of
- Speaker tells his dad that past generations had mining prospectors who could dig for gold & diamonds
- Technology is the speaker's generation's claim to fame
- Use of metaphors: New discoveries &
developments in technology compared to
planting flags & staking claims
- Stanza 5:
- The speaker asks his dad to give him freedom to explore the internet
- Line 16 is a repetition of line 5: "Let me go"
- Emphasizing the boy's desperation for his dad to let him be independent
- Stanza 6:
- But the speaker's dad worries about his son being hurt personally/emotionally
- In all the previous stanza's the speaker's created arguments trying to convince his dad to let him use the internet freely
- "Maar" (but): Turning point in the poem
- Speaker says for the first time he actually needs his dad
- He's not as independent as he
wants his dad to think he is
- He asks whether his dad will still care about his if things go wrong one day
- Stanza 7:
- The speaker wants to his dad logically & rationally
- The speaker states which part of him will want to communicate with his dad
- His brain (referring to his rationality & intellectual abilities)
- Stanza 8:
- The speaker asks if his dad would support & listen to him when he truly needs him
- Because it's a rhetorical question, the tone changes
- If he's threatened by a paedophile or molested / threatened by a thief
- Image of a USB to show contact & connectedness
- Whether his dad will make contact with him like a
USB so he can share his issues & state of mind
- Stanza 9:
- Or will his dad shut him out & leave him to himself in coping with a crisis
- The speaker expresses the contrary
- 'Firewall' is used to protect your computer against viruses
- Used as a metaphor for the speaker's dad possibly
shutting him out & leaving him to his own devices
- "Kuberstorm" (cyberstorm) refers to the crisis the speaker fears
- The poem ends in a question: Showing
uncertainty & feeling of being threatened
- Dragon/sea monster as symbol of something that can be discovered
- Also a warning against something dangerous
- Linking to a computer/the internet