Thursday, August 29, 2019
Comparing and Contrasting
Compare and contrast the way the poets present a rustic activity? The two poems ââ¬ËPhotograph of Haymaker 1890ââ¬â¢ by Molly Holden and ââ¬ËHay-makingââ¬â¢ by Gillian Clarke portray rustic activity in a similar way. The poem ââ¬ËPhotograph of Haymaker 1890ââ¬â¢ consists of two stanzas and this could be linked to the fact that it is a reminiscing photo of a man who cuts hay. This shows the rustic activity due to the fact it is the poet possibly describing a relative of hers working. Whereas, the poem ââ¬ËHay-makingââ¬â¢ has three very short stanzas. We can link the short, fast flowing stanzas with the fact that the title seems synonymous with love making.The poet Molly Holden cleverly uses the imagery of life and death throughout her poem ââ¬ËPhotograph of Haymakerââ¬â¢. An example being ââ¬Ëto whet his scytheââ¬â¢ this conveys the message of death and an image of a grim reaper. Holden cleverly juxtaposes this with the phrase ââ¬Ëwhite shirt lit by another summerââ¬â¢s sunââ¬â¢. Gillian Clarke also uses an intriguing juxtaposition, ââ¬Ëthese hot nightsââ¬â¢. This juxtaposition shows a sultry image of natural passion. You could also link this to rustic activity if you imagine a worker possibly working in the night time. The tones of the two poems seem completely different from each other.Holdenââ¬â¢s poem, ââ¬ËPhotograph of Haymakerââ¬â¢ has a nostalgic tone ââ¬Ëhe pausing from his workâ⬠¦ trousers tied below the kneeââ¬â¢. The phrases used give the connotation of the poet bringing back good memories. This is what photographs tend to do. Clarke uses enjambment as she does not use punctuations to break up the flow of her poem and this adds to the dreary tone. Towards the end of the poem we see more evidence of rustic activity. The poet Molly Holden uses enjambment throughout the last stanza, ââ¬Ësweet hay and gone some seventy years ago and yet they stand before me in the sunââ¬â¢.This en jambment gives the image of hay possibly falling down. We can link this to rustic activity if we create an image in our head of hay falling down in a country farm. Gillian Clarkeââ¬â¢s poem has an interesting caesura before the word ââ¬ËBreatheââ¬â¢, this can be seen as a command possibly suggesting how the ritual of harvesting is metaphorically inspirational. Another important phrase which is strongly linked to rustic activity is, ââ¬Ëin the scratch of the hayââ¬â¢. The ââ¬Ëscratchââ¬â¢ of the hay creates a physical link between rural nature of a farm for instance and the act of human love making. We can also say that this is onomatopoeia.
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