different ways in which Ted Hughes portrays nature in his poems as well as themes and ideas‚ you should consider the poems techniques? Ted Hughes is an English poet who was inspired by nature at his homeland in Yorkshire and wrote countless poems on this topic. I have studied several poems (Thistles‚ The thought fox‚ the jaguar‚ the horses‚ Hawk roosting‚ Pike‚ and Ghost Crabs). Within these poems I am going to compare the ways and techniques in which Ted Hughes portrays nature using poetic technique
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the first fresh peach I had ever tasted. I could hardly believe how delicious. At twenty-five I was dumbfounded afresh By my ignorance of the simplest things. The Shot Your worship needed a god. Where it lacked one‚ it found one. Ordinary jocks became gods – Deified by your infatuation That seemed to have been designed at birth for a god. It was a god-seeker. A god-finder. Your Daddy had been aiming you at God When his death touched the trigger. In that flash You saw your whole life
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“Mooses” The poem “Mooses”‚ by Ted Hughes‚ is about two mooses that find themselves ugly and not attractive. But my thesis is‚ mooses are large mentally challenged animals. I came down to this because of the author’s statements in his poem. The author thinks that the moose is mentally challenged because he states‚ “And why am I so ugly?” This shows that he is mentally challenged because‚ in some cases‚ looks can show a person’s mental capacity. And in this case‚ the author thinks that the mooses’
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How does Ted Huges Present Nature in His Poetry? Ted Huges presents nature by using different descriptions‚ techniques‚ vocabulary and the way he structures his poems. In the three poems ‘The Thought Fox’‚ ‘The Jaguar’ and ‘Hawk Roosting’ Huges presents his view on nature using animals. However he does portray the animals quite differently one a self-cantered and vicious creature‚ another‚ elegant and innocent and the last a trapped creature with no boundaries. Huges give animals’ human like features
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The poem‚ ‘The Jaguar’ written by Ted Hughes‚ is one of his most famous poems but no his only by far. From 1984 to his death‚ Hughes wrote poetry constantly. Critics rank him as one of the best poets of his time. ‘The Jaguar’ describes the different lifestyles of animals at a zoo and expresses how they feel about being trapped in their cages. It shows the slow‚ lazy movements from some of the animals to the fast‚ rapid movement of the jaguar. In ‘The Jaguar’‚ Ted Hughes uses techniques such as tone
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The Violent Energy of Ted Hughes "Poetic voice of blood and guts" (Welsh 1) said one newspaper headline announcing the appointment of Ted Hughes as the new Poet Laureate in November of 1984. It was fairly typical of the surprise with which the media greeted this appointment because Ted Hughes‚ it seems‚ is for most people a difficult poet. Hughes is frequently accused of writing poetry which is unnecessarily rough and violent when he is simply being a typically blunt Yorkshireman‚ describing
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Tribulations of Ted Hughes On August 17‚ 1930 the great English poet‚ Edward James (Ted) Hughes‚ was born in Yorkshire. He attended Mexborough grammar school where his teachers proposed that he should take up writing‚ fueling his love of piecing together poetry. Hughes always had a love and interest for animals and they were a major theme in his writing even from an early age. In 1946 the schools magazine published his poem "The Wild West" and others in ’48. That same year Hughes won an open exhibition
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Ted Hughes’s full name was Edward James Hughes. He was born on Aug. 17‚ 1930‚ in Mytholmroyd‚ England. His parents were William Henry Hughes and Edith Hughes. William Hughes‚ Ted’s father‚ a carpenter‚ survived World War I‚ and he told stories about the war which left imprints in Ted’s imagination with violence and death. At the age of 7 he and his family moved to Mexborough‚ Yorkshire‚ and at Mexborough Grammar School he began to write poetry. He won a scholarship to Pembroke College‚ Cambridge
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Thistles by Ted Hughes The title ‘thistles’ refers to a group of flowering plants characterised by leaves with sharp prickles. The poem is very short and is separated into four stanzas of three lines each. The poem does not have a rhyming pattern but uses much alliteration. The poem conveys a negative mood‚ one that is aggressive and violent. In the first stanza‚ Hughes portrays an almost countryside atmosphere for the readers to experience. He uses alliteration: “hoeing hands” that describe the
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Ted Hughes is a renowned‚ restrained poet for his ability to be intricate‚ and his concealment of emotion in insignificant forms of life. In the poem‚ Thistles‚ Hughes personalizes Thistles; such trivial plant‚ to successfully evoke the lives of human beings‚ while emphasizing nature’s dominance over men. The poem also deals with the idea of history being repeated in a cycle‚ the dead being "resurrected". Such complex ideas are effectively conveyed through language techniques‚ diction and versification
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