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What do you think is being described by the following sets of words?

What do you think is being described by the following sets of words?. wild  strange  magic    ecstatic  rapture  mysterious fire 
 apocalyptic . lumbering  steady  great hulks    broad-breasted  gigantic  warm smouldering  manes    . Horses - Edwin Muir (no. 113).

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What do you think is being described by the following sets of words?

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  1. What do you think is being described by the following sets of words? wild  strange  magic    ecstatic  rapture  mysterious fire 
 apocalyptic lumbering  steady  great hulks    broad-breasted  gigantic  warm smouldering  manes    

  2. Horses - Edwin Muir (no. 113) 1 Use the class dictionaries to look up any words that you are not sure 
about and to annotate the poems carefully. Also remember that the poems have a glossary underneath. Edwin Muir was born in 1887 on a farm in the Orkney Islands. At the age of 14 he moved with his family to 
Glasgow ( a big industrial city in Scotland) 
which he came to regard as a descent from 
Eden into hell.

  3. 2 In what ways is the poem about the (a) environment (b) the animal itself. Highlight using 2 different colours to help yourself illustrate this. 3 Are there any time shifts (changes in time) in the poem? Identify where 
the poet seems to refer to a pre industrial age. With what emotion does 
he do it? 4 Find an example of personification in the poem. 5 What is the tone of stanzas 4 and 5? What shows us this? 6 How effective is the final verse of the poem. What is he trying to do 
and is he successful?

  4. One person in each pair swap and share ideas with your new partner 
making sure that you both have a complete set of notes. Homework Research the term Romantic poetry. Make sure that you use more 
than one source (book or website) and make notes. *Deadline next 
Monday. Watch this documentary to understand the period of the Romantics 
more and their connection with nature. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfGugapN0hs

  5. Romantic poetry

  6. Pike - Ted Hughes http://poetryarchive.org/poetryarchive/singlePoem.do?poemId=7079 Listen to the poet talking about the poem and then his reading of the poem 
itself. When it is finished write down your first impressions of the reading. What moods does it bring to mind? Look up words that you don´t understand and annotate the poem.

  7. Do these images match the picture that 
you had in your mind?

  8. Pike - Ted Hughes Focus on the descriptive language at the start of the poem. 1 What kind of view of nature/the world does Ted Hughes 
present in this poem? Back up your ideas with 3 bits of evidence. 2 What is its 'instrument' that is referred to in stanza 4? ´instrument´in this sense its "way of achieving or causing 
something" 3 In what ways are stanzas 5-7 different from the rest of the 
poem? 4 The economy of the last two words of stanza 5 is effective in 
conveying what? 5 What is the atmosphere of the last verse? In the final line who is watching 
whom?

  9. Pike, three inches long, perfect Pike in all parts, green tigering the gold. Killers from the egg: the malevolent aged grin. They dance on the surface among the flies. Or move, stunned by their own grandeur, Over a bed of emerald, silhouette Of submarine delicacy and horror. A hundred feet long in their world. In ponds, under the heat-struck lily pads- Gloom of their stillness: Logged on last year's black leaves, watching upwards. Or hung in an amber cavern of weeds

  10. The jaws' hooked clamp and fangs Not to be changed at this date: A life subdued to its instrument; The gills kneading quietly, and the pectorals. Three we kept behind glass, Jungled in weed: three inches, four, And four and a half: red fry to them- Suddenly there were two. Finally one With a sag belly and the grin it was born with. And indeed they spare nobody. Two, six pounds each, over two feet long High and dry and dead in the willow-herb-

  11. One jammed past its gills down the other's gullet: The outside eye stared: as a vice locks- The same iron in this eye Though its film shrank in death. A pond I fished, fifty yards across, Whose lilies and muscular tench Had outlasted every visible stone Of the monastery that planted them- Stilled legendary depth: It was as deep as England. It held Pike too immense to stir, so immense and old That past nightfall I dared not cast

  12. But silently cast and fished With the hair frozen on my head For what might move, for what eye might move. The still splashes on the dark pond, Owls hushing the floating woods Frail on my ear against the dream Darkness beneath night's darkness had freed, That rose slowly toward me, watching.

  13. Can you guess what animal will be 
discussed next from these words? grace  reeling  diamond    tongue flicking  

  14. Hunting snake 1 Highlight in different colours a The description of the snake. b The effect the snake has on the walkers. 2 What connections can you make to the 2 poems about animals that we 
have already read? 3 Do you note anything about the number of syllables being used per line? How is this achieved? What effect does it have? 4 What is the effect of alliteration in the poem (verse 3) 5 How might the word 'reeling' have a double meaning in this context? 6 What are the snakes majestic qualities? 7 Does the use of monosyllabic words work with the meaning of the poem?

  15. Sun-warmed in this late season’s grace under the autumn’s gentlest sky we walked, and froze half-through a pace. The great black snake went reeling by. Head down, tongue flickering on the trail he quested through the parting grass, sun glazed his curves of diamond scale and we lost breath to see him pass.

  16. What track he followed, what small food fled living from his fierce intent, we scarcely thought; still as we stood our eyes went with him as he went. Cold, dark and splendid he was gone into the grass that hid his prey. We took a deeper breath of day, looked at each other, and went on.

  17. Choose 2 poems from Horses, Pike and Hunting Snake to answer 
the following exam style question. Compare the ways in which these two poets use an animal to show 
the power of nature. Remember to discuss what happens in the poems comment on perspective of the speaker (time changes and role in 
the poem, do they match ideas of Romanticism) identify the language and imagery establish tone identify structure (and its effect) Give a personal response (try to do this all the way through, but 
especially at the end)

  18. Poetry comparison feedback 1 Beware of listing too many examples or quotations 
withoput discussing them or explaining connotations 2 The same for list of techniques without examples 3 Saying ´formal language´to mean anything that is not 
slang is not a useful lcomment 4 Explanation needs to link back carefully to the 
question

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