He grew up in Yorkshire, so his
writing is influenced by nature
The poem is about the world from a hawk's point of view
The poem doesn't have
a rhyme scheme which
links to the idea that the
hawk doesn't conform
to any rules and he
does what he wants
'whole of Creation' he is saying it took all of God to produce his foot and that God is in his foot, he thinks he is God
the hyperbole adds to how
important he is
'the sun is behind me' this has double meaning, the sun
is on his side or even the sun is of lesser importance
than him. It provides everything with life, but he is still
more important
'tearing off heads' this is graphic imagery, which adds to the monstrosity of the hawk
'nothing has
changed', he is
saying that
evolution has
done nothing as
he is the best
version
'allotment of death' this is a juxtaposition as an allotment grows new vegetables, but he is talking about death, this provides an unsettling mood for the readers
The anthropomorphism helps to convey the qualities of the hawk, however it also
suggests the idea that the hawk is representative of man as we hold ourseleves in
the highest regard as we created everything bar nature
The poem begins
and ends with I,
which
underscores his
arrogance