Sunday, May 26, 2019
Simon Armitage – Comparison of Two Poems
Simon Armitages poetry is basically all nigh regular objects and mickle which fork out been twisted to realise the objects and people seem peculiar and strange. His poetry makes worldy people deem roughly the metrical composition and why it is like this.I have been studying his poetry in depth to see what is behind the poems, all together I have analysed five poems the poem without a title which is sometimes called I am exact bothered this is active an incident involving a young boy at school in a science lab, Poem is about the safe and the no-account events that a man has done to his family, It aint what you do it what it does to you is about what a psyche has and has not done, Cataract operation is what a person sees after they have had a cataract operation and About his person is about ad hominem belongings found on a deceased man and how they fight down his life.Many of his poems relate to each other Poem and I am genuinely bothered atomic number 18 both in so nnet form suggesting they relate to cognize in one way or another. In I am precise bothered pick out is expressed through a thirteen year old boy in a science lab asking him to unify him in an rattling(prenominal) way, the incident is very enigmatic and umpteen images are painted in the endorsers coping with images about admire solely in an odd way, he uses oral communication such as basketball hoops and eternity, these give the idea of love just now Armitage uses these denominations to describe a boy asking someone to marry him by burning their fingers.This is very odd but Armitage has twisted the sonnet form and the love words in to make the poem a very extra quotidian poem. The sonnet form is similarly used in Poem, it is very surprising that the sonnet form is used in this poem as the reviewer at the end of the poem is left with hatred due to what the type in the poem has done. I am very bothered and Poem are both about treating someone badly but I am very bother ed is in first person and is only about one extra public incident the subject did when he was thirteen but Poem is in third person and is about a lifetime of what an ordinary graphic symbol did right and wrong.In this poem love is expressed through the characters family the s great dealer can tell the character in the poem loved his family as he praised his wife for every meal she do and always tucked his daughter up at night, the man seems like an ordinary family man but at the end of each stanza from the sonnet it informs the ratifier of what he has done wrong in his life he punched her in the face, this makes the reviewer shocked and surprised of what the character has done in the poem.This makes the poem seem strange and peculiar. The comparison between the things the character did wrong and right is big but strange although the character does a lot more replete(p) things than bad he is remembered for all the bad things he has done by the reader, this might be because the bad events are at the end of each stanza and the bad events are very shocking and hurtful towards his family.The poet wants the reader to think that the man is very normal, he reflects the man through the poem the title is very ordinary and bo yell just like the man, the use of the word and makes the poem seem ordinary, the use of words with only one syllable makes the poem seem ordinary and the cycle per assist of the poem is also very plain and boring. Armitage uses iambic pentameter, he uses this in many of his poems like It aint what you do it what it does to you and Poem.Iambic pentameter is used in many sonnets its gist is ten beats per line. It aint what you do it what it does to you is a poem about what a man has and hasnt done. To describe these devil things he has used pesterinal different types of nomenclature colloquial and bollock. Armitage has used colloquial voice communication before in I am very bothered, in that instance he uses it to describe what a chara cter has done when he was thirteen, a thirteen year old would probably use colloquial language.But in It aint what you do it what it does to you he uses colloquial language to describe what the character has not done bummed and wobbly, this explains to the reader that it is nothing special that he has done. Armitage even uses this language in the title Aint. Using formal language to describe what the character has done it gives some feel and thought into the poem inertia, toyed and padded. It also gives the reader a sense of adore and awe. The structure of the poem is very plain and simple, just like you would see on a normal poem you would read it uses four quatrains.Armitage normally uses the structure of the poem to give his poems some feel and compassion, for example utilise sonnets in I am very bothered and Poem but for It aint what you do it what it does to you he uses a straight forward structure, it might be because he wants the reader to think the poem is very ordinary a nd what the character has done is very ordinary too. Throughout the final stanza of the poem there is some enjambment tiny cascading sensation/somewhere within us as the lines flow from one to another, mirroring the stamp of the fluid feeling cascading sensation he is attempt to describe. at that place is also some enjambment in the middle of the poem describing something the character has done, skimmed humdrum stones across black moss, the enjambment gave the affect of the stones leaping like they do on black moss. The alliteration of the s does this also by using the s every 2 syllables. Alliteration is also used in I am very bothered in this circumstance Armitage uses alliteration to describe a burning sensation by using a b sound Bunsen burner/branded/burning.Some of the death stanzas in Armitage poems refer back to the title in It aint what you do it what it does to you the expiry line of the poem is That feeling I mean, not only is at a line which makes the reader refer back to the title it is also a type of question. It is asking the reader if they know what the character is talking about. Armitage also does this in Poem Sometimes he did this, sometimes he did that. Armitage characteristically refuses to valuate the man leaving the reader with a question.The last line refers back to the title in a poem called Cataract operation, the last line is I pull down the blind but not before a company of half dozen hens struts through the gate, looks around the courtyard for a contact lens, in this short passage there is two references becoming back to the cataract one where the character drops the blind and where the hens look around the courtyard for a contact lens, in this instance an image is painted in the readers head of hens pecking around a garden just like a blind person would be doing when trying to find something. Cataract operation is about a washing line becoming a pantomime this is very economical as in just one word it illustrates how liv ely, colourful and entertaining the washing line is. Armitage uses a lot of metaphors to show how lively the washing line is, the metaphors give the reader a clear but strange image of what the washing line is doing the cancan of a rara skirt, the monkey business of a shirt. In this passage alone there are two metaphors inside it the skirt isnt really doing the cancan but it seems and looks like it is and the shirt is not really doing monkey business it just looks as if it is.By using metaphors it paints images inside the readers head of what the washing line looks like, it looks alive This is the only poem where metaphors make the ordinary extraordinary it takes a very imaginative mind to think of metaphors. As considerably as the passage containing metaphors it also contains personification the cancan is usually done by people. Personification is very rarely used in the poems Armitage writes, the poems I have read that are written by Armitage are all about people anyway so perso nification is not needed. There is also rhyme in Cataract operation hens and lens, skirt and shirt.But the rhymes in the poem are disguised as they are not where you would expect them to be, Armitage may be using this to represent the poem the poem being strange and unthinkable. The simile at the start of Cataract operation is a visual representation of the sun rising and being born(p) for the next day The sun comes like a head through last nights turtleneck. , this is the only simile of the poem, another simile is seen in About his person, this simile symbolises death a rolled-up cite of explanation planted there like a spray carnation.These two similes are to do with two very different things even though Cataract operation and About his person are very similar poems they both have rhyming couplets inside them and are both 20 lines wrong, but they are also very different About his person is all about death, violence and finality but Cataract operation is about liveliness, entert ainment and magic. The two similes represent this. About his person is about personal belongings found on a deceased man and how they represent his life. The language used in the poem is very plain and ordinary, maybe representing the character in the poem.The poem is basically a list of what has been found, very simple and straight forward unlike Cataract operation where it is very straining to understand what is happening. In Poem a list is also used with the repetition of the word and, it makes the poem seem ordinary just like About his person. goal stopping words are used in the poem Stopped represents the finality of the man but is used in the poem to describe an latitude watch that was found on the man. That was everything is also and end stopping phrase at the end of the poem, this cuts off the poem dead just like the character was.The items found on the man give the reader series of pictures or images that are factual snapshots. The choice of words in this list shows how a poet can play with multiple meanings to great effect. The title itself can be read in two ways, as can the final line. Many of the words have very violent overtones of finality expiry, beheaded and all of these meanings are consciously worked on by the poet. These words describe objects that are found on the man, this is a molybdenum ironic as the man that the objects are found on is dead.All the poems I have analysed that are written by Armitage all link together in one way or another. At first impressions Armitage makes his poems look extraordinary but when looked in depth the poem is actually ordinary but in a twisted way, e. g. in Poem the reader thinks that the character is a very nasty man by doing very horrible things to his family. Armitage does this by position the nasty events the character does at the end of each line, the reader then remembers the character by what he has done wrong.But when the poem is looked into, the amount of good things the man did nicely actua lly overrules the things he did nastily. The character now looks like an ordinary man but as the nasty events are out of the blueish it makes the reader think that the character is very malevolent. Armitage uses metaphors, similes, personification and imagery to make the poems he writes extraordinary. Imagery is the key thing in poetry, if the reader can not imagine the poem coming to life then the poem is useless, Armitage uses imagery to paint images inside readers head that makes the poem seem strange and odd.Armitages poetry makes the reader think twice of what is put in the poems. Colloquial and formal language is also used to describe what a character has done in a poem, if Armitage wants the reader to think that something is boring he uses colloquial language and if he wants the reader to think that something is amazing and exciting then he uses formal language. Armitage makes the reader think what he wants them to think and from this he controls the readers mind to think of something that is very extraordinary.Simon Armitage Comparison of Two PoemsSimon Armitage writes about a range of different topics. In the two poems I have chosen, he focuses on people and personal vex. I will briefly describe both poems and show how each poem reveals something about Human record.I will begin with the poem About his person. This poem lists all the items a dead man had upon him when he was discovered. In many ways, these objects represent the mans life. It reads like a police report. Although the poem cannot tell us anything about the mans thoughts, it tells us a lot about the mans life. The poem is deceptively simple.There is a pun in the title. About his person is a formal way of saying he had on him but it also emphasizes that the poem is about a dead person. This is an example of how Armitage uses ambiguous language. Also, his technique of colloquial language makes his poems more meaningful. Both poems are about ordinary people. Another example of ambiguous language isA give-away photograph stashed in his wallet,A keepsake banked in the heart of a locket.We ask ourselves, is the photograph stashed in his wallet the equivalent of a keepsake in a locket, or were they two separate items. The photographs makes us think that he may have had loved ones. After all it is gay nature to love someone.Armitage uses a simile in line twelve. Up until line twelve the diction is factual and plain. In line 12, he compares the note of explanation to a spray carnation. Carnations being funeral flowers, are associated with death or a funeral and reminds us that that somehow the man died. The use of language points towards how mercifuls experience depression and even suicide. In this poem, each item is described precisely.Armitage begins the list with a normal 5.50 in the mans pocket, exactly. He mentions a library card on its date of expiry. The card is invalid. Just like the mans life it federal agency nothing, its worthless. The poem also mentions a mortise lock also cognize as a death lock, an analogue watch, self-winding, stopped. These items are listed in terms of death. Could this list of deathlike items be a reason for a human to commit suicide? We are intrigued by the final line, A final demand, what does this mean? The postcard is also a mystery but it indicates family or loved ones.A ring of white unweathered skin, No gold No silver. Obviously, the man used to wear a ring but he no longer does. Was he divorced? Or maybe his wife died. We can link those last few lines to line six-spot about the first of April (i.e. April fools day.) This indicates that someone was fooled. Perhaps, he was fooled by his wife. The last line, That was everything, finalises the poem. His whole life shown by the list, everything.The poem is structured in rhyming couplets. It is short and precise and consists of 10 two line stanzas. The poem has a simple form. The poet uses imagery e.g. The photo in his wallet leads us to imagine that he had loved ones. The carnations make us imagine a memorial service. We are born and than we die, it is nature. No gold or silver but a mark where a ring had once been indicates a failed relationship. He was being selfish if, he had committed suicide but we are still sympathetic. The poem gives a pessimistic mentality on life.The poem is sad, mourning and depressing. There isnt much feeling but there is a lot of meaning. The tone is deadpan. There is a slow musical rhythm to indicate death and sorrow. The rhyming within couplets gives an air of finality and completeness.The poem I am very bothered is written differently. It is like a read confession. The colloquial language used is very appropriate. There is not much rhyme in this poem. It is quite simple just as a thirteen-year-old boy would write he uses words such as butterfingered. The first stanza tells us he is bothered about many things he has done in his life and not least the time he burned her hand in the chemistry lab. The w ord chemistry makes us think of love and emotion. The poem is typical of how far a human being would go to get some-ones attention but we have to remember that the boy is only thirteen and incapable of expressing his love for the girl he wished to marry. The girl is anonymous, why? , Perhaps to avoid embarrassment. He played the handles of the scissors as if it were a game. An example in this poem of Armitages ambiguous language is the naked lilac flame. The two different meanings I have discovered are, the flame is unprotected and can do damage, and the boy may have been thinking of a naked girl. The writer addresses the girl as you as if she was present.The words unrivalled stench and eternity emphasise how serious the burning actually was. Was the boy branding the girl as his just as farmers brand their herd eternity is a strong word. It means forever but it also makes us think of eternity rings. did they meet in later like and get married? The girl will be scarred. She will alwa ys remember the incident. The poem is quite personal but also sarcastic. The poem is about forgiveness, shame and guilt. The writer manipulates us in the last stanzaDont believe me, please, if I sayThat was just my butterfingered way, at thirteen,Of asking you if you would marry me.He asks us not to believe him but I think it is obvious that he wants us to believe him. He is felling guilty.The poem begins with and slow sorrowful rhythm but speeds up towards the end. There is a pleading, sorrowful and activated tone.The first stanza is a bout the planning of what he will do. It is almost as if he takes a deep breath before he starts the second stanza where he actually carries out the experiment. It describes what he does and what happens. The third stanza is about his regrets. The poem reads like a script and there is some rhyme. As I mentioned before the word naked gives us two different images, as does the word eternity. Is a sign of never-ending love but we may also think of eter nity rings.The poem goes from the writer finding enjoyment in what he did to his confession of what he did. The poem is an example of human nature i.e. The boy loves the girl, is uncapable of showing his feelings and so he hurts her. It seems ironic but it happens. This poem reveals that people make mistakes and usually the want forgiveness.Armitages use of language has helped reveal a lot about human nature particularly in the second poem, which is quite typical, of what a thirteen year old boy might do to gets a girls attention.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.