Monday, January 13, 2020
Poetry by Gwen Harwood Essay
ââ¬Å"Ideas and the way those ideas are presented are what makes a poetsââ¬â¢ work distinctive. Choose 2 poems from 1 poet and describe how they show the distinctive characteristics of this poetsââ¬â¢ work. Gwen Harwood skilfully employs language techniques to explore a variety of distinctive themes and ideas in her poems. This is seen in ââ¬ËIn The Parkââ¬â¢ where Harwood explores the human condition through the simplistic and dull life of her female protagonist, while in ââ¬ËPrize Givingââ¬â¢ she explores multiple universal themes through her male protagonist Professor Eisenbart. Harwood effectively establishes a simplistic image through her title ââ¬ËIn the Parkââ¬â¢ to imply the mundane simplicity of the place, the people and the idea. This is enhanced through the simplistic first line as the woman ââ¬Å"sits in the parkâ⬠. Here we are introduced to the protagonist with her depressingly dull and monotonous life, clearly portrayed through Hardwoodââ¬â¢s image in describing how the protagonistââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"clothes are out of dateâ⬠. This not only portrays her shabby physical appearance but also the idea that she lives in the past and that time has passed her by. The use of negative connotation describing how her ââ¬Å"two children whine and bicker, tug her skirtâ⬠adds to the depressing mood, before Hardwood goes on to tell us that ââ¬Å"A third draws aimless patterns in the dirtâ⬠, helping to further reinforce her lack of purpose in life. The double entendre of the persona being ââ¬Å"too lateâ⬠on two levels effectively conveys that she is ââ¬Å"too lateâ⬠to show disinterest to him and that it is ââ¬Å"too lateâ⬠for her and this lost love to regain a close relationship. Harwoodââ¬â¢s clever employment of the cliched expressions of ââ¬Å"how niceâ⬠and ââ¬Å"time holds great surprisesâ⬠conveys how dull and pointless their conversation is to reinforce the superficiality of the situation and the pointlessness of their reunion as his ââ¬Å"neat headâ⬠has no remnant of communication left to share with her. Furthermore, the womanââ¬â¢s low self esteem is portrayed as she interprets his of the words ââ¬Å"but for the grace of Godâ⬠¦ â⬠as his relieved sense of having escaped her monotonous lifestyle. The vague and unimportance of their conversation is enhanced as ââ¬Å"they stand a while in flickering lightâ⬠whilst ââ¬Å"rehearsing the childrenââ¬â¢s names and birthdays. â⬠Harwood implies the facade of interest the man takes in the children who ââ¬Å"whine, and bickerâ⬠, yet ironically the woman is talking to the manââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"departing smileâ⬠. Her uninviting and uninspiring lifestyle which is perhaps causing him to leave. A sense of motherly love is represented in he poem as the woman is ââ¬Å"nursing the youngest childâ⬠. The image of the Madonna-like child on her implies something very different when we see her as she ââ¬Å"sits staring at her feetâ⬠, her apathy replaces caring and the boredom of her life replaces her joys of motherly love. The final line of ââ¬Å"to the wind she says, ââ¬Å"they have eaten me alive. ââ¬Å"â⬠, conveys that sadly he is gone and that she is alone, with no one to talk to but the wind, to whic h she voices the truth of her pain and disillusionment. The ideas from ââ¬Å"In the Parkâ⬠are also reflected similarly in another of Harwoodââ¬â¢s poems, ââ¬ËPrize Givingâ⬠where the arrogant Professor Eisenbart is contrasted to the dominating Titian-haired girl. The poem immediately establishes Professor Eisenbart as an abhorrent character through the use of connotative language in ââ¬Å"rudely declinedâ⬠. The professor is implied as stodgy and old fashioned character ââ¬Å"when pressed with dry scholastic jokesâ⬠where he changes his mind and decides to ââ¬Å"grace their humble platformâ⬠. This portrays the humble status of the school in contrast to his arrogance and superiority, which is further exemplified ââ¬Å"when he appearedâ⬠and ââ¬Å"the girls whirred with an insect nervousnessâ⬠, implying that he sees himself as a light theyââ¬â¢re attracted to. This sound imagery not only suggests the mood of interest in him but also the sound of the assembly as a collective. The head is differentiated ââ¬Å"in humble blackâ⬠who ââ¬Å"flapped round and steered her guess, superb in silk and furâ⬠, which characterizes her as comparatively less ego-centric that the ââ¬Å"resplendently dressed guest. Alternately, she feels a sense of pride in others around her and in what she is doing when it is clear that Professor Eisenbart concerns only for himself. In the third stanza, the girls are referred to as ââ¬Å"half-hearted blooms tortured to form the schoolââ¬â¢s elaborate crestâ⬠which creates an image of the flower arrangement that is the assembly. This imagery personifies the girls as reluctant to represent the school, but also symbolises their innocent flowering into womanhood which makes ââ¬Å"Eisenbart scowl in violent distasteâ⬠, conveying that his indifference has turned into revulsion. The simile when Eisenbart ââ¬Å"then recomposed his features to their best advantage: deep in thought, with one hand placed like Rodinââ¬â¢s Thinkerâ⬠further enhances his self image of conceit and superficial self control for appearance sake as he stages this pose in this allusion to the classic thinker statue. Eisenbart vies the girls as a ââ¬Å"mosaic of young heads, Blonde, black, mouse brownâ⬠as all he sees is a colour pattern of heads and does not acknowledge the girls individually. However, this is changed when ââ¬Å"underneath a lightâ⬠¦ ne girl sat grinning at him, her hand bent under her chin in mockery of his ownâ⬠. Here, a spotlight is shone, in Eisenbartsââ¬â¢ mind, onto the titian haired girl who shows an amused perspective as she seems to interrupt him as no one else does. His closer observation now beyond the ââ¬Å"mosaicâ⬠shoes a flicker of interest in him, as opposed to his previous disinterest. He remains uncaring and unintereste d by the ââ¬Å"host of virgin handsâ⬠until once again he is challenged by the ââ¬Å"girl with titian hairâ⬠who ââ¬Å"stood up, hitched at a stocking, winked at near-by friendsâ⬠. He notes all this detail move by move as implied by the punctuation in her attitude of directness, self-composure, self-composure and ultimately intention of some act to shatter his power. The youthful titian haired girl challenges ââ¬Å"his calm age and powerâ⬠of knowledge, experience and authority as she transforms before him and becomes a powerful person in her passion and her arrogance well beyond his own. From his indifference, he is now the ââ¬Å"sufferedâ⬠victim to ââ¬Å"her strange eyes, against reason darkâ⬠. Harwood uses figurative language here to emphasize the change of his perspective as the power is now turning to her. Here there is a challenge between his logical sense of reason and the seeing ââ¬Å"strange eyesâ⬠of this titian haired girl. They are odd to him because they allude the sense of reason that he lives by and she defies. The power and passion of the girl has ââ¬Å"forged his rose-hot dreamâ⬠and his own power is a fake, a forgery, in contrast to hers. The final stanza in this poem reveals that ââ¬Å"age and powerâ⬠can be challenged as Eisenbartsââ¬â¢ false superiority is seen through the ââ¬Å"eyesâ⬠of the titian haired girl. Synecdoche is employed when Eisenbart is ââ¬Å"summoned by arrogant handsâ⬠to show the girls power. She is symbolised by the power of her music, characterized as ââ¬Å"titian-hairedâ⬠to imply her passionate nature and her ââ¬Å"eyesâ⬠that see through Eisenbartsââ¬â¢ superficial superiority and arrogance. Her power is further conveyed as ââ¬Å"Eisenbart teased his gownâ⬠, showing his sexual unease and realisation that his self image is weakened. His perspective changes as the young and fiery girl defeats him by deflating his self- image and superiority. Eisenbart now sees himself differently as he ââ¬Å"peered into a trophy which suspended his image upside down: a sage fool trappedâ⬠. His composure has left him and his self-image is reflected in her trophy as he is mirrored upside down, symbolically reversed and up-ended. The oxymoron in ââ¬Å"sage foolâ⬠demonstrates that he is controlled by her power. The ideas presented in Gwen Harwoodââ¬â¢s poetry is made distinctive through her use of a variety of themes and language techniques. The powerful ideas represented in ââ¬Å"In the Parkâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Prize Givingâ⬠explore multiple universal themes and give the reader a better insight into the human condition.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.