Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Almond Tree By Jon Stallworthy
- "All the way to the hospital /
the lights were as green as
peppermints"
- Poem starts in a
happy tone
- Simile used to symbolise the
green colour of the traffic lights,
also symbolises the movement
of the poem
- The
peppermints
symbolise
how the
protagonist is
alert and
focused on
the road.
- "Let it be a son, said / the man in
the driving mirror / let it be a son"
- Repetition of "Let it be a son"
show how he hoped to become
father to a healthy boy.
- Out-of-body
experience as he
refers to his reflection
as "the man"
- "I parked in the almond's / shadow
blossom, for the tree / was waving,
waving me / upstairs with a child's
hand"
- First reference to
the almond tree
- Personification as tree beckons him
into the hospital
- "New- / Minted, my bright farthing /
coined by our love, stamped with / our
images, how you enrich us!"
- Protagonist is filled with joy and
happiness at the birth of his son.
- This is the
poems high
point.
- Repetition of
"our" is used to
emphasise on the
joy and
excitement
- "the visitors' bell / scissored the calm
/ ...The doctor walked with me / to the
slicing doors. / ...His voice - I have to
tell / you - set another bell / beating in
my head: / your son is a mongol"
- Dramatic
change in tone.
- Harsh language
prepares the reader for
the upcoming shock
- "set another bell beating in
my head" warns reader of
bad news being delivered.
- It is revealed that the
protagonists son has downs
syndrome.
- "How easily the word went in - / clean
as a bullet / leaving no mark on the skin,
/ stopping the heart within it.
- Simile is used to
emphasise on the
protagonists shock.
- "mongol" is
like a bullet.
- The doctors' words were quick
and damaging to the protagonist
- "my own / car under its almond tree /
an the almond waving me down"
- Second reference of
the almond tree.
- Now waving him down to
deal with reality.
- "In a numbered cot / my son sailed from
me; never to come / ashore in my kingdom /
speaking my language."
- Land and sea imagery is
used as protagonist feels
detached from his son.
- "kingdom" links back to when
the protagonist felt as though
he were a "lucky prince"
- He feels as though him and his
son will never understand each
other.
- "The almond tree / was beautiful in labour / ...flower
after flower shook free // ...In labour the tree was
becoming itself. I, too / ...saw myself blossoming, //
wrenched from the caul of my thirty / years' growing,
fathered by my son"
- Repetition of "flower" as tree is in full
blossom it is beautiful, when the son
matures he too shall be beautiful.
- Tone changes
as he
compares his
new found
matureness to
the blossoming
tree.
- Paradox of "fathered
by my son", Stallworthy
means the protagonists
son has had a maturing
influence on his father.
- "You have a sickness they cannot heal, /
the doctors say: locked in / your body you
will remain. / Well, I have been locked in
mine. / We will tunnel each other out. You
seal / the covenant with a grin.
- The reader is finally
reminded of the son's
illness.
- Protagonist acknowledges that he has
been trapped by a narrow mind.
- "my little mongol love, / I have learnt
more from your lips / than you will from
mine perhaps. / I have learnt that to live
is to suffer / to suffer is to live."
- Finally
acknowledges
the child as his
own.
- He has changed
due to his son's
illness.
- Repetition of "suffer" and "live"
emphasise on how we can't have
one without the other.