Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Flag - John Agard
Anlagen:
- Subject and
Themes
- The power of
nationalism
- How national symbols
bind people together
- And force them
apart
- The difference
between literal and
symbolic
- Flag
- Does not
represent anything
real
- 'it's just a piece of
cloth'
- But holds power
because it
stands for
something more
- Form and structure
- Five stanzas
- Three lines each
- Middle line of each stanza is shorter
- Mimics the shape of an old medieval flag
- Like three lines on flags today
- The first and third lines of the first three stanzas rhyme
- Suggests a bond between two voices in the poem
- Final stanza ends on a rhyming couplet
- A pair of lines of poetry that
rhyme and have the same
length and metric pattern
- Like a conversation
- Voice of youth and voice of wisdom
- Interrogative, naïve questioning compared to wiser older answers
- Title
- Makes you think of
patriotism
- Suggest the poem is about power and countries
- Possibly war
- Language
- Imagery
- 'that brings a nation to it's
knees'
- Religious
imagery
- Suggests praying
to or worshiping
flag
- War references
- Contrast to imagery about the movement of the flag
- 'fluttering in a
breeze'
- Like a
butterfly
- Non threatening images
- 'tent'
- war / military / encampment
- 'blood you
bleed'
- Implies lives will be
lost'
- Alliteration
- Draws
attention
- Ending
- 'blind your conscience to the end'
- Ambiguous
- 'end'
- Death
- War
- Consequences
- More than one
meaning
- Comparison
- At The Border,
1979
- Also about
nations and
nationalism
- Land holds power like flag
- Treated like it's something more
- Poppies
- Explores the power of symbolisim
- Poetic Techniques
- Repetition
- 'Its just a piece of cloth'
- Implies significance even though it says overwise
- Metaphorically - stands for much
more
- Literally - a piece of
cloth
- Questions
- 'What's that fluttering in the breeze'
- Present tense
- Question will always be there
- Last stanza question changes from what to how