Strange fruit Strange fruit is a song/poem by Billie Holiday which talks about the lynching mob. We have read it and heard it and this is my response to it‚ which includes how the imagery is explained‚ the message of the poem‚ how successfuly the point has been made and the differences between the poem and the song. Imagery The poem describes a gory image‚ Negroes hung from trees by the lynching mob. This scene is a horrible one to make into a poem‚ and writing techniques are used to make
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Seamus Heaney: Tribal Practises Heaney has referred to ancient tribal practices as ‘providing imaginative parallels to modern Irish politics’. Examine Punishment and at least two other poems in light of this statement. Throughout both ‘North’ and ‘Wintering Out’ Heaney uses his chief poetic value as a ‘tribal poet’ to explore and reveal his feelings on Irish politics. The changing face of his tribal poetry strongly reflects Heaney’s shifting attitude to the solution of the problems in Ulster
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SEAMUS HEANEY AS A IRISH NATIONALIST Heaney is widely considered Ireland’s most accomplished contemporary poet and has often been called the greatest Irish poet since William Butler Yeats. In his works‚ Heaney often focuses on the proper roles and responsibilities of a poet in society‚ exploring themes of self-discovery and spiritual growth as well as addressing political and cultural issues related to Irish history. His poetry is characterized by sensuous language‚ sexual metaphors‚ and nature
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the poem “Digging”‚ Seamus Heaney explores the differences between generations of men in his family through retracing the past. It is a poem of love and respect for the achievements of his father and grandfather as a digger‚ but at the same time comparing the traditional occupation to his own way of “digging” as a writer. Heaney expresses a sense of isolation and resemblance he feels toward his family by using significant symbols throughout the poem. In the first stanza‚ Heaney introduces the readers
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Seamus Heaney – ‘At a Potato Digging’ • Context • • The poem deals with two different potato harvests. One is the harvest from the present day that goes successfully and which delivers a rich crop. The second potato harvest looks back to the famine of 1845 when the crop failed and many people starved. Whilst the famine is no longer a threat‚ its ongoing fear remains and this can be seen in the use of religious language throughout the poem. For example‚ the bowed heads of the potato pickers suggest
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In Seamus Heaney’s poem “Blackberry-Picking” he describes his personal experience with blackberry picking. Throughout the years it is evident that the experience has become less pleasurable. Through rhythm‚ comparison‚ and sensory imagery‚ Heaney not only describes his experience but also says that the innocence of childhood and the wonders of nature are transient‚ and disappointment has to be confronted. Heaney uses repetition of sound in his phrase “glossy purple clot” (line 3) to describe the
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“Punishment” “Punishment‚” a poem written by Irish author Seamus Heaney‚ speaks of the discovery of the body of a young bog girl‚ who as realized later in the poem‚ was punished for being an “adulteress.” (23) On closer inspection and as the poem shifts from past to present the faith of the bog girl is compared with the faith of another woman in more recent violent times‚ namely The Troubles in Northern Ireland. In this poem Heaney thus comments‚ through the use of literary devices such as enjambment
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The Constable Calls By Seamus Heaney A Constable Calls is the second in a sequence of six poems entitled ’Singing School’ which concludes Heaney’s fourth collection ’North’ (1975). The poem is a vivid description of an incident from the poet’s childhood - a policeman making an official visit to his father’s farm at Mossbawn to record tillage returns. There is something grotesquely bizarre about an armed representative of the law travelling by bicycle around the Ulster countryside to record agricultural
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The Early Purges by Seamus Heaney. What the poem is about: ’The Early Purges’ by Seamus Heaney focuses on the traumas of childhood‚ and how impressionable we are when we are young. The poem is sad: it is about a child who sees kittens drowning‚ along with many other animals being killed in various methods on a farm. At the time the child is terrified‚ but by the end of the poem the fully-grown child is doing all the deeds he was so scared of when he was young. The poem is about how we lose
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The Turnip-snedder The poem “The Turnip-Snedder” by Seamus Heaney is about an archaic machine that was used in traditional farming‚ to cut the heads off turnips. The turnip-snedder is personified and portrayed in multiple ways. It is personified in a monstrous way but also in a very god like and powerful manner. The turnip snedder is also used to reflect the idea how some people refuse change even though it is inevitable. The poet’s attitude is nostalgic with a sinister undertone of violence and
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