Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Prelude
- Storm on the Island
- The power of nature to terrify us
- "a huge peak, black and huge"
- "the grim shape towered up between me and the stars"
- Personification of the "huge peak". E.g "upreared its head", "growing still" and "strode after me"
- Makes nature seem threatening and cruel
- Forboding, frightening and sinister tone/atmosphere
- "in grave and serious mood"
- "there hung a darkness, call it solitude or blank desertion"
- "no familiar shapes remained, no pleasant images of trees"
- "huge and might forms, that do not live like living men, moved slowly through my mind by day, and were trouble to my dreams"
- Enjambement makes the poem seem breathless, and the events unstoppable
- Reflects the characters panic and fear and makes nature seem more terrifying
- "leaves and branches can raise a tragic chorus in a gale"
- "so that you can listen to the thing you fear forgetting that it pummels your house too"
- "spits like a tame cat turned savage"
- Simile shows how the storm is wild and uncontrolable
- "We are bombarded by the empty air. Strange, it is a huge nothing that we fear"
- Personification of nature makes it seem threatening and cruel
- Unerving tone/atmosphere
- Kamikaze
- The beauty of nature
- "small circles glittering idly in the moon"
- Beautify natural imagery used to convey the beauty of nature
- "heaving through the water like a swan"
- Similes used to convey the beauty of nature
- "little fishing boats strung out like bunting on a green-blue translucent sea"
- "pearl grey pebbles"
- "cloud marked mackerel"
- "A little boat tied to a willow tree"
- "melted all into one track of sparkling light"
- The influence of nature on people
- "It was an act of stealth and troubled pleasure"
- Oxymoron/juxposition
- Demonstrates the characters contrasting feelings about nature
- "nothing but the stars and the grey sky"
- "heaving through the water like a swan"
- "he must have looked far down at the little fishing boats strung out like bunting on a green-blue translulent sea"
- The poem juxtaposes beatiful imagery with dark and negitive imagery
- Reflects the inner conflict of the character as he tries to come to terms with his contrasting feelings
- "he must have wondered which had been the better way to die"
- "the dark prince, muscular and dangerous"
- "salt-sodden, awash with cloud-marked mackerel"
- Associates his family with nature, which is what brings him home
- Beauty of nature caused the pilot to act on impulses and emotions, and forget
how society would veiw him when he returned