Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Unseen Poetry: The Poets
- William Blake
- Wrote about opposites,
innocence and freedom
- innocence and experience: writes
positives and negatives of an innocent
child's perspective and an adults view
- Poets feature a character
fighting a greater force
(symbolising the ruling groups
of upper class and the Church)
He believed in fighting
oppression.
- Symbolism : Uses natural objects to
symbolise human flaws and
weaknesses
- Repetition is used throughout
which emphasises the point he
wants to convey
- Adds to nursery
rhyme feel
- Uses rhyme to create a sing-song quality
like a NURSERY RHYME. This makes his
poems seem simple but they actually
have a hidden meaning
- John Keats
- Symbolism: Nature(emotions),
Ancient world-(life is short),
Music (poetry)
- Nature inspired him
and he uses nature as a
metaphor throughout
- Parents died when he
was young
- He wrote lots
about death and its
inevitability
- Addresses inhuman things
as if they could reply to him
constantly
- Some of his poems are about
the pain of loving someone
you can't be with.
- Wrote about change and the
contrasts between
temporary and permanent
things. He believed beautiful
things were living and the
only way to preserve them
was through art. This is why
he wrote poetry.
- Traditional sonnets (regular
rhyme scheme) and odes(always
praise someone or something)
- Christina Rossetti
- Lots written in 1st Person, to
make the poem personal
- Many of her poems have a
strong rhyme scheme and simple
vocabulary. This is so it was easy
to understand, but it had HIDDEN
MEANINGS.
- Symbolism: ''Eating Fruit'' = sin and
the loss of innocence or plants or
flowers = life and seasons = the
journey from life to death.
- Was deeply religious
- She challenged the Victorian belief
that marriage was the central aim
of every woman's life. She chose
Divine Love above romantic love.
- Suffered a terrible
illness all of her life
- Lots of her poems about
Death (maybe due to her
illness?)
- Thomas Hardy
- Uses symbols to
represent the passage
of time, life and death.
- Born In Devon
- Writes lots about
nature (plants, animals
and rural life.)
- Many of his poems focus on
disappointment in love life and
grief for people who have died.
- He describes time as an
unfriendly force that
brings change ( such as
death and loss of love)
- Used lots of different form line
lengths and rhyme schemes which
affected the pace and rhythm of the
poem.
- Made up new words
which gives his poems a
distinctive voice.
- Married
TWICE.
- First wife
died.
- Robert Frost
- Everyday: Finds a
deep meaning in
everyday experiences.
- Nature: believed it could
have a huge effect on
people, and discusses
different characters'
experiences with it.
- Some in blank verse to
mimic natural speech.
- Simple Language to explore
complex emotions
- Ageing: The loss of youth-
How young people take
their freedom for granted.
- Unhappy life
- Wilfred Owen
- Talks about
physical and mental
injuries from war.
- Usually tells a story
which helps the
reader to connect
with the poem.
- Creates a
vivid image of
war
- Joined army in WW1
- Uses sound patterns
(alliteration) to make
the poem forceful
- Talks about the
reality of war and
its gruesomeness
- Dorothy Parker
- Poems are short
to display one
idea/emotion.
- Criticised double
standards for men and
women
- Death: Uses
dark humor to
express her
interest
- Writes alot about
unequal relationships
and break ups
- Believed
in equality
- Married 3 times
- Starts upbeat but
then adds a twist to
change the poems
meaning
- W. H Auden
- Poems are direct which gives
a sense of urgency onto the
more important words of the
poem.
- Wrote love
poems to show
the fragility of
love.
- Wrote about
moral actions
- Wrote about real
life
- Maya Angelou
- Oppression
- Love: Realistic and
family love= good and
bad
- Unusual structure to
highlight key words
- Discrimination
- Mute for 5 years. Her
poems were meant to
be spoken
- Tony Harrison (on
last exam paper, not
likely to come up
once again
- Poems reflect his view
of current events
- Class: Discusses
divisions
between social
classes
- Great
education
- Strict rhyme scheme
to impose order on
chaotic ideas +
feelings.
- Family: His conflict
between him and
his parents.
- Often writes part of the
poem in a yorkshire
accent (parents voice)
- Wendy Cope
- Felt that her parents thought
she wasn't good enough.
- Short sentences and simple
vocab so its easy to read and the
message comes across strongly.
- Her poems seem traditional
(strong rhyme scheme) but are
not what you'd expect
- Poems have air of
regret
- Deal with serious subjects
in a light hearted way.
- Humor : to make serious
points and to put sad
situations into perspective
- Brian Patten
- Growing up:The
sadness of having
to grow up
- left school at 15
- irregular rhyming
pattern to vary the
pace and mood
- simple lang +clear
message
- Death:
Says its
inevitable
- Nature: Can give
people peace
- Jo Shapcott
- Imagery: Brings
poem to life
- Nature: The effect
on humanity
- Cancer
- How science
changes the way
we think
- Characters:
More
interesting for
the reader
- Sophie Hannah
- Men= stubborn
women= dishonest
- Traditional forms -
sonnets in contrast
to her non-trad view
- Finds humor in
everyday life
- Relationships: Failed,
affairs - bitter tone
- Uses exaggeration
to emphasise key
points
- Owen Sheers
- war: effect on the
soliders
- How ppl leave a
mark on the
landscape
- Growing up: The loss of
innocence that comes
with it.
- Welsh
Countryside
- Form: natural rhythm
. Varies length of
stanzas to break the
flow of the poem of
highlight a key idea.