How does Judith Wright use particular technical features to explore ideas and emotions?
Judith Wright is one of the greatest poets that Australia has ever produced. Most of her poems are based on social issues. Throughout her poetry Wright uses various techniques that explore different ideas and emotions. This can then be easily deciphered by the reader, allows them to bond to the meaning of the poem. Wright’s poetry covered emotions and ideas through the use of technical features in her poems; such as rhyme, rhythm, imagery and tone.
Wright, through the poetic technique of rhyme, is able to explore certain ideas and emotions for various issues or areas in life. The constant rhyme in “Man to Woman” follow an ABBAA pattern, it is called an enclosed rhyme. This causes a rhythm that leads to a climax; which explores the idea of the exhilarating moments of conception and birth. The build-up of rhythm, caused by the enclosed rhyme, creates a perfect climax where a comma, which indicates silence, stresses the four last words “for I am afraid”. These words portray strong feeling of anxiety and mirror Wright’s feelings about her pregnancy at the time. Creating emotion through rhyme and rhythm is a common theme throughout Wright’s poems; the type of impact created by these techniques in “Woman to Man” is also apparent in other poems. “Egrets” has a rhyming pattern and simple sentence structure that creates a feeling of serenity, the constant ABABAA pattern, through both stanzas, and the use of rhyming words created a smooth rhythm that gives a peaceful perspective on the poem. The constant use of same rhyming at the end of each line throughout both stanza’s assists in exploring the beauty of nature, in particular the beautiful ‘Egrets’. The rhyme and rhythm in this poem explores the peaceful perspective made from that particular scene; Wright uses the techniques brilliantly to advocate emotions and ideas. In contrast to “Egrets”, “The Bull” has a use of