Written by Mrinal Bhattacharjee, Kolkata - Last Updated Friday, 12 July :20

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Written by Mrinal Bhattacharjee, Kolkata - Last Updated Friday, 12 July :20"

Transcription

1 Philip Arthur Larkin, popularly known as Philip Larkin, is a remarkable name in English literature. He was a visionary, a Movement Poet, Hardyesque, The man next to door, Dark poet. His reputation rests on his image of a rational, vigilant, emotive and responsive mind to the changing physical and mental landscape. Philip Larkin was born on the 9th August, 1922 in Coventry. His father s name was Sydney Larkin and his mother was Eva. His elder sister s name was Catherine. They lived in Coventry till Larkin studied at king Henry VIII Grammar School in Coventry. His childhood was uneventful though he enjoyed the usual interests of small boy of his age. At about the age of ten he was writing short poems, articles of humorous and joking nature. He drew and painted since childhood days and it continued throughout his life. Larkin was a precocious reader. He read Butler, Hardy, Huxley, Bennett, Lawrence, Mansfield, Shaw and Wilde in his father s library. He felt interrupted in his study when he was at school. He excelled in English. He had an outstanding appreciation of and insight into literature, especially poetry. Larkin s stammer tormented him much. So he kept himself reserved. But he used this in his self-defence too. He mimicked his teachers and other staff and entertained his friends. Larkin gave attention to hair and dress very much from boyhood. From 1936 to 1940 Larkin regularly contributed articles, parodies and verse to the school magazine, The Coventrian for which he won the junior prize and senior prize. He edited the magazine jointly with B.N. Hughes from 1939 to As a schoolboy he wrote mostly in the vein of dramatic monologues. 1 / 14

2 Larkin had early formed some conception of the frustrations and disappointments of everyday life and his poetry proved this. In October 1940 Larkin went to St. John s College where he completed his Honours with first class in English literature. This time, as he had a poor eyesight, he failed his army medical test for joining the war. Ultimatum was published in the Listener soon after reading St. John s College, Oxford, just when he was ready for an injection of self-esteem. In Oxford he met kingsley Amis for whom he had special feeling of talent. Here in the last year, he also met Montgomery who acted as a catalyst to Larkin s own writing. Their friendship continued and proved productive for Larkin s career. In 1945 The North Ship was published in 1946 Jill (novel) and in 1947 A Girl in Winter (Novel) On the other hand, Larkin had an interest in Jazz. He and his friend Jim Sutton had brought with them to Oxford their joint collection of records which attracted many students. Larkin did not like Anglo-saxon literature. He liked Shakespeare. Besides, among his favourites were Auden, Betjeman, Hardy, Isherwood, Lawrence, Sassoon, Waugh and Yeats. Between 1941 and 1943 Larkin had several poems published in the undergraduate magazine, Cherwell, Arabesque, and the Oxford University Labour Club Bulletin. The most important friendship Larkin had with kingsley Amis. Jill and XX Poems were dedicated to Amis. In his turn, Amis dedicated Lucky Jim to Larkin. Amis s rather underrated poetry is sometimes like Larkin s in tone, though he lacks Larkin s scope as a poet, both in technique and subject matter. His novels reflect a similar world to that of Larkin s poems, though Amis concentrates on its comic aspects rather than its tragic ones, which engage Larkin more. 2 / 14

3 On returning home in Warwick Larkin tried to get service. He got a service in the vacancy of Librarian at Wellington. He did everything there. He took a correspondence course to get his professional qualifications. In Wellington he was in digs, in a cultural desert. However, Montgomery, his undergraduate friend lived nearly and they met frequently. These meetings gave creative stimulus to Larkin. Ten poems were published in 1945 in Poetry from Oxford in Wartime edited by William Bell. As a result of such appearance, The North Ship, his notable collection, was published in After that, Jill, his first novel was published in 1946 by the Fortune press. A Girl in winter (1947) his second novel gave indications of promise. His novels were meant to illustrate Larkin s early theory that life consisted of three stages; the first representing innocence ; the second its loss, resulting in devastation, the third the struggle, after desolation, to return to a truer and more mature self. After 1950 or so he realized that poems came more easily than novels. As for him, he did not choose poetry, poetry chose him. In 1946, Larkin went to the University College of Leicester for our Assistant Librarian s post. Here also he did everything with his staff. Larkin completed his professional studies course and became an Associate of the Library Association in His next appointment was as sub-librarian at Queen s University, Belfast from October Belfast marked a resurgence of Larkin s poetic activity. In 1954, the Fantasy Press published a pamphlet containing five poems and others appeared in various periodicals. George Hartley enquired if Larkin had sufficient material for a hard cover book. Larkin submitted a collection, then called Various Poems. The title was then changed on the objection of hartley and finally in 1955 it was published with the title The Less Deceived. This brought him a great recognition. 3 / 14

4 Larkin was appointed Librarian at the University of Hull in mid-march His professional success coincided with increasing literary recognition. His renown grew as new poems appeared in the established weeklies and poetry magazines. Now he began to revised biographies, works and criticize other poets. Larkin, at first in hull, remained in solitude and a little bit reserved. But gradually, he overcame this by joining social and professional activities arranged by the staff. Larkin s guidance helped much the publication Committee. He acted as secretary from the launch of the University s Press in 1958 until 1980, and remained a member of it until death. Larkin attracted the national prominence as well as the Arts Council by bringing the problem of purchasing manuscripts of contemporary writers by foreign libraries. So a body National Manuscript Collection of Contemporary Poets (later writers) was formed in Larkin served it from 1963 to He was also its chairman from 1973 to Larkin was also engaged as the first Compton Lecturer in poetry in recognition of Larkin s now well- established literary reputation. Larkin s famous collection, The Whitsun Weddings, published in February 1964, was received with greater acclaim. The poems expressed distillations of a remarkable poetic personality. Larkin got many prizes for this book among which the Queen s Gold Medal for poetry in 1965 was the best one. In 1970 followed All what Jazz : A Record Diary, a collection of monthly jazz-record reviews written for the Daily Telegraph. Its introduction, attracted much attention for the scathing attack on the absurdity of modernism in all forms of art. He also worked on The Oxford Book of Twentieth-Century English Verse for the Clarendon Press. Larkin s last collection of his own poetry, High Windows, appeared in 1974, incorporating some of his most bitter protests to date against old age, death and disillusionment. The volume s success guaranteed his position as Britain s leading poet. 4 / 14

5 Five universities conferred honorary doctorates on Larkin between 1969 and After the death of Day-Lewis in 1972, Larkin was tipped to be the next Poet Laureate. The honour, however, went to Betjeman. After High Windows, he wrote some uncollected poems, the most important of which, Aubade appeared in To the poems should be added The Brynmor Jones Library, A short Account and Required Writing. Larkin wrote a history of the Library which he referred to as his last book. It was not commercially distributed then. His last published book in 1983, Required Writing, Miscellaneous Pieces , a collection of essays and reviews, won the W.H. Smith Literary Award for In 1984, Larkin was elected to the Board of the British Library and after the death of Betjeman he was the clear favourite to succeed him as Poet Laureate. But he felt unable to accept the honour because he was writing very little poetry then and he could not sustain the Mr. Poetry image which Betjeman had so successfully created. However honours came thick and fast. He got CBE in 1975, the German Shakespeare Preis in 1976, elected chairman of the Booker Prize panel in He was made a companion of Literature in He served on the Literature panel of the Arts Council. The University of Hull gave him the honorary title of professor in The honour conferred by Oxford Seemed to him the really big one. Larkin was a man of retiring habits. He even disliked holidays either. He had a weakness for women Ruth Bowman, Maeve M Brennan and Monica jones were his closer personalities. But he married none of them. His general outlook on life was very gloomy and bleak and his poetry is deeply colored by this pessimistic outlook. The last and most highly esteemed tribute, the Order of the Companion of Honour, was announced in June He had a major surgery because he was suffering from Cancer. He breathed his last on the 2nd December / 14

6 Regarding the influence of other poets on Larkin, Auden, Dylan Thomas, Yeats and Thomas Hardy should be mentioned. As a mature poet, Hardy influenced him much. Hardy changed his thought process with a realistic view of life. He was beginning to feel what Hardy was writing. Philip Larkin is also associated with the Movement Poets like Robert Conquest, Donald Davie, Kingsley Amis, D.J. Enright, John Wain, Elizabeth Jennings and John Holloway. However Larkin did not share all the features of the Movement Poets. He could sympathies with others, because he wrote in a mode of direct and personal response to particular experiences. Larkin never eschewed the great theme on principle nor the heightened diction that was necessary for its statement. He wrote on those themes that were of perennial importance: the conflict between what we are and what we can imagine ourselves to be, the destructive effects of time, suffering as it hurts, and as it matures us, the endlessly complex relationships between people, the urge to slough off what Yeats called all this complexity of mire and blood. In common with Dr Johnson Larkin saw in life much to be endured and little to be enjoyed. Technically he was an extraordinary and accomplished poet. His forms are traditional rather than modern, though they are various and unmistakably a full response to contemporary life. Larkin was a man of extraordinary complexity and contrast; a man of many facets. The public image of reserved personality hermit of Hull, the Churlish misanthropist, a pessimist was refuted by the private persona. The inner man was full of contradictions. He was a compassionate man, his observations were often keenly acerbic. A modest man, he did not suffer fools gladly. A man of remarkable intellect, he loved the commonplace. He took refuge in solitude, but was dependent on close friends. He was nervous in public but his delivery was confident, urbane, witty and polished. He was a professed agnostic yet he envied those with religious faith. In spite of his life long fear of death, he tackled it head-on in his poetry. He was one of those rare people, larger than life, whose presence long after death remains palpable. THE NORTH SHIP: IMPLYING FRIGHTENING IMPLICATIONS The North Ship, published in 1945, is not more than juvenilia. Larkin himself accepts his 6 / 14

7 beginning efforts as impressions of three major poets: Looking back, I find in the poems not are abandoned self but several the ex-schoolboy, for whom Auden was the, only alternative to old fashioned poetry : the undergraduate, whose work a friend affable characterised as Dylan Thomas ; but you ve a sentimentality that s all your own and the immediate post-oxford self, isolated in Shropshire with a complete Yeats stolen from, the local girls School. This search for a style was merely one aspect of general immaturity. (Required Writing: Miscellaneous Pieces, , 28) Despite Larkin s admission, one can find no trace of Dylan Thomas in The North Ship: Anthony Thwaite connecting on this said that he could find no trace of Dylan Thomas in The North Ship but Yeats was certainly impressionable to Larkin and there are marks of obvious influence, for E.g. the poem XX. His lift with his bosom friend Bruce Montgomery added much to his self criticism, depression and loneliness. These are some of the reasons which gave a colour of maudlin melancholy to T he North Ship. The titular poem The North Ship is a sequence of fine short poems with an allegorical narrative framework. One introduces the north ship depicted in a pattern to journey of three ships, one is distinguished from the other two right in the first stanza. The first ship is on a journey to the west and is propelled by a favourable mind to a rich country whereas the second goes into the opposite direction to the east and faces the hostility of the wind. The third ship is the north ship that travels for an adventure. Compared to the first two ships the north ship is given a colour of significance, more so is elevated to the level of a legend. The ship is symbolically representative of the human conditions in which the ship stands for individual the sea for life and the wind projects the odds of life constituting circumstantial problems. The north ship is representative of an existence that encounters the hazards and proves its fortitude towarding the process of journey. In contrast the two ships are on a different level of meaning The west ship moves effortlessly whereas the east hip fights all hazards but in vain. 7 / 14

8 The second poem shifts the focus from the ship to the mindscape of the narrator who happens to be a member of the crew. The speaker is haunted by a recurrent nightmare which warns him against his ship being perilously struck in the sea. The third section Fortunetelling show the ship moving to North where the narrator happens to meet a fortune teller who predicts his having an erotic experiences with a girl. The fourth, titled Blizzard objectifies the tumult in the speaker s mind as he gathers the image of the girl Who will take no lovers/till she winds me in her hair (305). The muddledom of the speaker is further intensified by a drunken boatswain singing A woman has ten claws a picture of terrific sexual commitment. Thus The North Ship began with an attempt to explore life but closes on the note of sexual obsession of the speaker with a female lover. All through the length of the poem, the female figure remains a fantasy figure and never appears in flesh and blood in the real world. The poem s dreamy evocation of remote coldness merging with sexual fear suggests how Larkin used the Yeatsian model as a way of externalizing and mythologizing his own psychology. THE LESS DECEIVED: PORTRAYING SAD-EYED REALISM The Less Deceived, published in 1955, is a collection of twentynine poems. The poems in this collection show the poet Larkin capable of strong feeling and conveying strong feeling in poetry. Strong feeling and gloomy temperament are characteristic features of this book. The collection was originally named as Various Poems but on the objection of its publisher George Hartley, Larkin renamed it after one of the poems Deceptions. Larkin wrote to Hartley that he did not want an ambiguous title or one made any claims to policy or belief. The Less Deceived would give a certain amount of sad-eyed and clear-eyed realism. 8 / 14

9 In line with Hardy his poetic strategy includes a major role of personal experience of everyday life. Though Larkin s poems are full of personal experience but the title-giving poem Deceptions tells someone else s story. It gives an account of past events he read in Mayhew s London Labour and the London Poor published in A young woman was drugged and raped later. She was inconsolable and wanted to be killed or sent back to her aunt. Larkin was sensitive to her pain even from distance. Larkin rendered her bitterness of sorrow and lacerating pain vividly in the poem. He used various sound patterns, technical devices and diction well to produce the effect. However, Larkin s big finish lies in the fact that Larkin starts with an event which develops into a general statement that rapist s sexual fulfilment is an illusion. He is more deceived than his victim. On the other hand, suffering develops man s awareness of life. The girl will grow spiritually and mature by her knowledge. Loss of identity, deceptions of fame are beautifully depicted in Larkin s reflective poem At Grass. It is a poem about oblivion, a poem about the penalties and pleasures of retirement through the symbolic presentation of the retired horses. At Grass holds a crucial position in Larkin s writing when creativity flows from an acceptance of deprivation. Deprivation for him was what daffodils were for Wordsworth. Church Going, written on the 28th July, 1954, is masterpiece of Philip Larkin. It is a poem in which the speaker discusses the futility and the utility of going to a church. The discussion is half-mocking and half-serious. Some people would go to church out of some inner compulsion or to derive some wisdom from the sight of the many graves in the churchyard even after the churches have ceased to be place of worship. 9 / 14

10 Larkin s theme of the problem of time compels him to resort to alternatives rather than final solutions. The solidity and convincing nature of arguments give strength to the poems of this book. Where Next Please is constructed round a descriptive meditation, Toads is an example of meditative dialogue. The speaker, in the vein of argument, complains against toad work as an obvious attempt at self-persuasion. Larkin s so-called love-poems are often disappointed reflections on failure, impotence and helplessness. Although the sexual act is generally believed to bring about fulfilment and relief, a sexual act in Larkin s poems is deceptive, and its promise proves to be empty or false. The war had inflicted severe damage on traditional religious ceremonies and rituals in Britain, and Larkin s poems of the immediate post-war period express an uneasy agnosticism. Finally, the book shows a strong impulse to reject the conventional view of the personal past as a time of happiness. Larkin accepts the real world of everyday life as the land where his poetry is rooted. Preoccupation with death which increases with the passing of years is also noticeable. The poems have the tone of pessimism and seriousness. As a matter of fact, Larkin showed in The Less Deceived that he wrote movingly and memorably about aspects of life which were of great importance to his readers as well as to himself. He was a witty poet with immense verbal felicity, subtle modulations of tone, speaking a language with the idiom we speak. THE WHITSUN WEDDINGS: READINGS IN HOMESPUN MELANCHOLIA The Whitsun Weddings published nine years after The Less Deceived made Larkin win accolades all over the globe. The book went on to win the Queen s Gold Medal for Poetry in 1965 and Larkin became the subject of a BBC Monitor film. British and American Reviewers and critics have highly appreciated the collection Kenneth Allott called Larkin the most exciting new poetic voice with the possible exception of Dylan Thomas since Auden. 10 / 14

11 The Whitsun Weddings is an exploration of subjects in a broader philosophical perspective in an attempt to rationalize disappointments in order to make life bearable. Larkin upheld the belief that there is an unbridgeable gap between illusion and reality and that a wise attitude of life can make it less impressive. Larkin s poem in The Whitsun Weddings may be classified under various heads, like - serio-comic poems, advertisement poems, Poems of transcendence and poems of negativity Naturally The Foundation will Bear Your Expenses is a comic poem which is labelled as Human number. The serio-comic effect of the poem arises from the mood of irony. The title poem The Whitsun Weddings describes the train journey the train in the opposite direction from the countryside into the city. It begins with an uninteresting passenger boarding a train from Hull where Larkin was working as a Librarian to London on a Saturday. Like Here the physical landscape is painted, farms and cattle s being succeeded by polluted canals and then by hedges and grass. The whitsuntide heat, the holiday mood, the sights and smells of a hot afternoon journey are all captured in a moving train. The theme of the poem is introduced in the third stanza when the speaker s attention is attracted to the noise made by the wedding parties which at first he mistook for porters larking with the mails. At first he ignored the sight and kept on reading. But soon he began to notice and got absorbed in observing all that was happening on the platform of each station the train stopped at. In the next four stanzas the poet/speaker describes the dresses demeanours, attitudes and feelings of all the members of the wedding parties that gather at each platform to see off the newly wedded couples on the eve of honeymoon journeys. In the next stanza, the train is seen approaching London. Some critics feel that the wedding parties have been treated with much distaste. Ston Smith remarks that the speaker expresses contempt for society Where mass tastes and values prevail, and the charming yokels of an earlier pastoral have turned into menacingly actual travelling companions, claiming equal rights with the egregious and refined spectator of their shoddy ordinariness. (Inviolable Voice: History and Twentieth- century poetry, 176) It is true that initially the lonely observer detachedly portrays the wedding parties but soon he enters into the thoughts and feelings of the wedding guests as well as of the wedded couples. Each wedding brings out the children, father and women in their own unique kind of involvement. His attitude to the wedding parties transforms from satire to reverence. The journey by the train ends but the journey of life begins. The poem ends, thus, on a positive note suggesting that something new will grow out of these weddings and that people will be changed, the value of the poem lies in its success in transforming an outsider into an insider and ends in joyous shout - We are all in this life together. 11 / 14

12 (An Uncommon Poet for the Common Man, 121) Technically The Whitsun Weddings is a masterpiece a splendid specimen of what John Powell Ward calls Poetry of the Unpoetic. The poem illustrates dexterity and picturesque creativity with enchanting verbal embroidery. In this, the collection excels High Windows. A joyful end is the joyous quality and the young couples will bring life to London as rain-falling on the squares of wheat. HIGH WINDOWS: OBJECTIFYING NOSTALGIA This is the last volume of Philip Larkin with two very popular poems like To The Sea and Show Saturday High Windows is repetitive in themes therefore share much similar strain of thought with The Less Deceived, The North Ship and The Whitsun Weddings. The common note of thought is undoubtedly, love and death- but presented this time with a mature experience. This collection also raised the debate as to whether thrift, handwork and reverence are the important social and moral virtues central to Larkin s poetry. The titular poem High Windows marks a wide gap between him and the young. A meditation on this gulf prevails there from first to fourth stanzas. The argument is much balanced and not lopsided as the temptation lurks far and wide. There is a marked appreciative sway from the poet s attitude about envying them to the supposition that he might have been envied in his youth. High Windows compares the state of the poet sickened by existence yet continuing with 12 / 14

13 life-giving suffering despairing and then rejuneveted in soul by a re-purified idealism. This old man dying in a dreary hospital with his face pressed to the window longing for the blue sky outwards. In thought, the poem reminds a reader of Mallarme s high windows (Les Fenêtres) though Mallarme is classic in treatment and Larkin metaphysical or ecclesiastical too much extent. The title is borrowed from a poem of the same name by Dryden, published in The phrase means Years of wonder or extraordinary year whereas Dryden s poem celebrates the year the victory of English over the Dutch, Larkin s poem pinpoints the year 1963 the years that marks the beginning of Sexual liberation. High Windows is poet s higher self, now philosophically mature to realise that the only way for him to fill the vacuum of life which constantly haunts him is to identify himself with the human community, with all its humdrum, the sordid and the trivial and to be a part of it. Poems like The Card Players, To the Sea, and Show Saturday and The Explosion shows that the world is the place where consumerism leads to perpetual desire and a perpetual sense of hunger, where the menace of industrialisation threatens to destroy the natural beauty of the environmental world and to transcend the limiting bounds of life. The poet is empathically immersed in the lives of others the salesman, the, old people, the patients waiting in the hospital and their relatives the Card Players, the academic scholar, the mourners in a funeral procession, the miners and their wives. QUINTESSENTIAL LARKIN: A SURVEY Larkin s poetry often draws upon the poet s experiences, and biographical readings making his poetry remarkably eventful. His poetry swerves between Classicism and Romanticism, between Modernism and Postmodernism, between native British poetic tradition and the Anglo Franco, American Experimental line. His poem deeply registers the noticeable shifts in political, economic and philosophical orientations of the society for he witnessed the ugliness of Second World War, the decline of British Empire, the loss of religious sanctity, the rapid change in British society and striking advancement in industrial and consumerist cultures. It was primarily due to these reasons that each of his collection deals with new themes. 13 / 14

14 Larkin s first major collection, The North Ship deals with the issue of love, time and death whereas The Less Deceived explores the plight of basic human weakness of self deception and the desire for freedom from the commitments of life. The Whitsun Weddings includes matters related to Socio-cultural issues like the impact of advertisement in moulding man s attitude to life the din and bustle of life of boredom and surprisingly the beauty of music. High Windows deals with the hypocrisy of elitist scholars both at the public and at Government levels. Alongwith the effects of sexual revolution, ethos of a consumerist culture, the problem of alienation and the beauty of the world of nature are portrayed. These features enumerate that Larkin was a devout poet committed to serving muse by holistic compositions. Today so many years after his death, Larkin still continues to enjoy as much popularity as he did during his lifetime, and perhaps even more. 14 / 14

Examination papers and Examiners reports E040. Victorians. Examination paper

Examination papers and Examiners reports E040. Victorians. Examination paper Examination papers and Examiners reports 2008 033E040 Victorians Examination paper 85 Diploma and BA in English 86 Examination papers and Examiners reports 2008 87 Diploma and BA in English 88 Examination

More information

BEYOND THE PLEASURE PRINCIPLE; PHILIP LARKIN'S POETIC JOURNEY AN ABSTRACT. This dissertation is an attempt at studying Larkin s poetic

BEYOND THE PLEASURE PRINCIPLE; PHILIP LARKIN'S POETIC JOURNEY AN ABSTRACT. This dissertation is an attempt at studying Larkin s poetic BEYOND THE PLEASURE PRINCIPLE; PHILIP LARKIN'S POETIC JOURNEY AN ABSTRACT This dissertation is an attempt at studying Larkin s poetic journey in the light of Freud s theory of beyond the pleasure principle.

More information

Unit 6 Literary Focus. Collection 11: War Literature Collection 12: Themes of Modern and Contemporary Poetry Collection 13: Irony

Unit 6 Literary Focus. Collection 11: War Literature Collection 12: Themes of Modern and Contemporary Poetry Collection 13: Irony Unit 6 Literary Focus Collection 11: War Literature Collection 12: Themes of Modern and Contemporary Poetry Collection 13: Irony War Literature Poems that express. Memoirs that. Short stories that depict.

More information

OUT OF REACH THE POETRY OF PHILIP LARKIN

OUT OF REACH THE POETRY OF PHILIP LARKIN OUT OF REACH THE POETRY OF PHILIP LARKIN Also by Andrew Swarbrick THE ART OF OLIVER GOLDSMITH (editor) PHILIP LARKIN: The Whitsun Weddings and The Less Deceived T. S. ELIOT: Selected Poems Out of Reach

More information

Summer Reading Material: Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie by David Lunbar *STUDENTS MUST BUY THE BOOK FOR SUMMER READING. ELECTRONIC FORMAT IS ACCEPTABLE.

Summer Reading Material: Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie by David Lunbar *STUDENTS MUST BUY THE BOOK FOR SUMMER READING. ELECTRONIC FORMAT IS ACCEPTABLE. Ms. Rose Pre-AP 2018 Summer Reading Summer Reading Material: Sleeping Freshmen Never Lie by David Lunbar *STUDENTS MUST BUY THE BOOK FOR SUMMER READING. ELECTRONIC FORMAT IS ACCEPTABLE.* PLEASE READ THE

More information

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Studying literature is interesting and gives some pleasure. in mind, but fewer readers are able to appreciate it.

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Studying literature is interesting and gives some pleasure. in mind, but fewer readers are able to appreciate it. CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION 1.1 Background of The Study Studying literature is interesting and gives some pleasure in mind, but fewer readers are able to appreciate it. They have no impression to the works

More information

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in. Prose Terms Protagonist: Antagonist: Point of view: The main character in a story, novel or play. The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was

More information

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in.

The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was told in. Prose Terms Protagonist: Antagonist: Point of view: The main character in a story, novel or play. The character who struggles or fights against the protagonist. The perspective from which the story was

More information

Allusion. A brief and sometimes indirect reference to a person, place, event, or work of art that is familiar to most educated people.

Allusion. A brief and sometimes indirect reference to a person, place, event, or work of art that is familiar to most educated people. Allusion A brief and sometimes indirect reference to a person, place, event, or work of art that is familiar to most educated people. ex. He was a mild, good-natured, sweet-tempered, easy-going, foolish,

More information

Examiners report 2014

Examiners report 2014 Examiners report 2014 EN1022 Introduction to Creative Writing Advice to candidates on how Examiners calculate marks It is important that candidates recognise that in all papers, three questions should

More information

Do you know this man?

Do you know this man? Do you know this man? When Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from unquiet dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a monstrous insect. This, very likely the most famous first sentence in modern

More information

Where the word irony comes from

Where the word irony comes from Where the word irony comes from In classical Greek comedy, there was sometimes a character called the eiron -- a dissembler: someone who deliberately pretended to be less intelligent than he really was,

More information

In 1925 he joined the publishing firm Faber&Faber as an editor and then as a director.

In 1925 he joined the publishing firm Faber&Faber as an editor and then as a director. T.S. ELIOT LIFE He was born in Missouri and studied at Harvard (where he acted as Englishman, reserved and shy). He started his literary career by editing a review, publishing his early poems and developing

More information

The Romantic Poets. Reading Practice

The Romantic Poets. Reading Practice Reading Practice The Romantic Poets One of the most evocative eras in the history of poetry must surely be that of the Romantic Movement. During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries a group

More information

PRESENTATION SPEECH OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE ERASMUS + PROJECT

PRESENTATION SPEECH OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE ERASMUS + PROJECT PRESENTATION SPEECH OUR CONTRIBUTION TO THE ERASMUS + PROJECT During the English lessons of the current year, our class the 5ALS of Liceo Scientifico Albert Einstein, actively joined the Erasmus + KA2

More information

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA

A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA A central message or insight into life revealed by a literary work. MAIN IDEA The theme of a story, poem, or play, is usually not directly stated. Example: friendship, prejudice (subjects) A loyal friend

More information

the ending of a novel or play of acknowledges literary merit. Explain precisely how and why the ending appropriately or inappropriately concludes the

the ending of a novel or play of acknowledges literary merit. Explain precisely how and why the ending appropriately or inappropriately concludes the PAST AP OPEN TOPICS When we come to the end of a novel or play, a consistent mood should have been created and our consciousness of certain aspects of life should have been intensified or even altered.

More information

3200 Jaguar Run, Tracy, CA (209) Fax (209)

3200 Jaguar Run, Tracy, CA (209) Fax (209) 3200 Jaguar Run, Tracy, CA 95377 (209) 832-6600 Fax (209) 832-6601 jeddy@tusd.net Dear English 1 Pre-AP Student: Welcome to Kimball High s English Pre-Advanced Placement program. The rigorous Pre-AP classes

More information

Using humor on the road to recovery:

Using humor on the road to recovery: Using humor on the road to recovery: Laughing to Ease the Pain David M. Jacobson,MSW, LCSW http://www.humorhorizons.com Overview Presenter s story of using humor to overcome adversity Benefits of humor

More information

Guide. Standard 8 - Literature Grade Level Expectations GLE Read and comprehend a variety of works from various forms of literature.

Guide. Standard 8 - Literature Grade Level Expectations GLE Read and comprehend a variety of works from various forms of literature. Grade 6 Tennessee Course Level Expectations Standard 8 - Literature Grade Level Expectations GLE 0601.8.1 Read and comprehend a variety of works from various forms of literature. Student Book and Teacher

More information

O What is That Sound W.H.Auden

O What is That Sound W.H.Auden O What is That Sound W.H.Auden Apple Inc. 1st Edition Context!... 3 Poem!... 4 S.M.I.L.E. Analysis!... 6 Sample Exam Question Part A!... 15 Comparison!... 15 Sample Exam Question - Part B!... 16 Context

More information

Faq. Q1). Who was William Blake?

Faq. Q1). Who was William Blake? Faq Q1). Who was William Blake? Ans). William Blake (28 November 1757 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognized during his lifetime, Blake is now considered a seminal

More information

A230A- Revision. Books 1&2 االتحاد الطالبي

A230A- Revision. Books 1&2 االتحاد الطالبي A230A- Revision Books 1&2 االتحاد الطالبي Final Exam Structure You will answer three essay questions: one of them could be a close reading. One obligatory question on Shelley And then three questions to

More information

Metaphor: interior or house is dull and dark, like the son s life. Pathetic fallacy the setting mirrors the character s emotions

Metaphor: interior or house is dull and dark, like the son s life. Pathetic fallacy the setting mirrors the character s emotions Metaphor: interior or house is dull and dark, like the son s life Pathetic fallacy the setting mirrors the character s emotions Suggests unpleasant and repetitive work Handsome but child-like: suggests

More information

Some of the emotions that can stimulate suicidal feelings

Some of the emotions that can stimulate suicidal feelings Suicidal Feelings Very few sensitive people have not felt suicidal at a moment or two in their lives. This world is filled with incidents and accidents that give tremors to our hearts. For all of us, there

More information

Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy

Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy Adam s Curse (1902) By: Hannah, Ashley, Michelle, Visali, and Judy Reading The Poem (3 MINUTES) Take out your poems from the last unit!!! Reflecting On The Poem (2 MINUTES) IOC (15 MINUTES) Activity! Just

More information

An Analytical study of some of the poems of Philip Larkin based on his theme of death

An Analytical study of some of the poems of Philip Larkin based on his theme of death European Online Journal of Natural and Social Sciences 2018; www.european-science.com Vol.7, No 3 pp. 616-622 ISSN 1805-3602 An Analytical study of some of the poems of Philip Larkin based on his theme

More information

2013 Second Semester Exam Review

2013 Second Semester Exam Review 2013 Second Semester Exam Review From Macbeth. 1. What important roles do the witches play in Macbeth? 2. What is Macbeth's character flaw? 3. What is Lady Macbeth's purpose in drugging the servants? 4.

More information

Session Three NEGLECTED COMPOSER AND GENRE: SCHUBERT SONGS October 1, 2015

Session Three NEGLECTED COMPOSER AND GENRE: SCHUBERT SONGS October 1, 2015 Session Three NEGLECTED COMPOSER AND GENRE: SCHUBERT SONGS October 1, 2015 Let s start today with comments and questions about last week s listening assignments. SCHUBERT PICS Today our subject is neglected

More information

This sorrow on my face is but a hood;

This sorrow on my face is but a hood; 15 Introduction The reader who loves the work of Thomas Hardy or Robert Graves and turns to the best biography of each to find out more about the writer s life may not even register, at first, the name

More information

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION 6 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION 1.1 The Background of The Problem Literature in the true sense of the term is that kind of writing which is charged with human interest, and concern of Mankind. Generally, Literature

More information

A Study of Modern Life in the Poetry of T. S. Eliot

A Study of Modern Life in the Poetry of T. S. Eliot UNIVERSITY GRANTS COMMISSION BAHADUR SHAH JAFAR MARG NEW DELHI 110 002 Minor Research Project Executive Summary A Study of Modern Life in the Poetry of T. S. Eliot Dr. Ashalata M. V. P. Raman Associate

More information

WHAT DEFINES A HERO? The study of archetypal heroes in literature.

WHAT DEFINES A HERO? The study of archetypal heroes in literature. WHAT DEFINES A? The study of archetypal heroes in literature. EPICS AND EPIC ES EPIC POEMS The epics we read today are written versions of old oral poems about a tribal or national hero. Typically these

More information

A structural analysis of william wordsworth s poems

A structural analysis of william wordsworth s poems A structural analysis of william wordsworth s poems By: Astrie Nurdianti Wibowo K 2203003 CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION A. The Background of the Study The material or subject matter of literature is something

More information

Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature

Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature irevise.com 2016 1 Love and Relationships Poetry Cluster AQA GCSE Revision Notes English Literature. irevise.com 2016. All

More information

Tchaikovsky: Russia s Most Popular Composer

Tchaikovsky: Russia s Most Popular Composer 1 Hayley Richard Tchaikovsky: Russia s Most Popular Composer To many he was an inspiration; to more he was a legend--pyotr Tchaikovsky, the great Russian composer. Leaving behind 7 symphonies, 11 operas,

More information

Examiners Report January GCSE English Literature 5ET2H 01. Understanding Poetry

Examiners Report January GCSE English Literature 5ET2H 01. Understanding Poetry Examiners Report January 2013 GCSE English Literature 5ET2H 01 Understanding Poetry Edexcel and BTEC Qualifications Edexcel and BTEC qualifications come from Pearson, the world s leading learning company.

More information

Another helpful way to learn the words is to evaluate them as positive or negative. Think about degrees of feeling and put the words in categories.

Another helpful way to learn the words is to evaluate them as positive or negative. Think about degrees of feeling and put the words in categories. REFERENCE LIST OF TONE ADJECTIVES (p.30) One way to review words on this list is to fold the list so that the word is on one side and the definition is on the other. Then you can test yourself by looking

More information

The Investigation and Analysis of College Students Dressing Aesthetic Values

The Investigation and Analysis of College Students Dressing Aesthetic Values The Investigation and Analysis of College Students Dressing Aesthetic Values Su Pei Song Xiaoxia Shanghai University of Engineering Science Shanghai, 201620 China Abstract This study investigated college

More information

The impact of World War II and literature on the concept of absurdity in the works of Boris Vian

The impact of World War II and literature on the concept of absurdity in the works of Boris Vian The impact of World War II and literature on the concept of absurdity in the works of Boris Vian Shadi Khalighi PhD student of French language and literature, Islamic Azad University Central Tehran Branch

More information

Open-ended Questions for Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition,

Open-ended Questions for Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition, Open-ended Questions for Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition, 1970-2007 1970. Choose a character from a novel or play of recognized literary merit and write an essay in which you (a)

More information

LITERARY TERMS TERM DEFINITION EXAMPLE (BE SPECIFIC) PIECE

LITERARY TERMS TERM DEFINITION EXAMPLE (BE SPECIFIC) PIECE LITERARY TERMS Name: Class: TERM DEFINITION EXAMPLE (BE SPECIFIC) PIECE action allegory alliteration ~ assonance ~ consonance allusion ambiguity what happens in a story: events/conflicts. If well organized,

More information

With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Grade 1 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text.

With prompting and support, ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Grade 1 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text. Literature: Key Ideas and Details College and Career Readiness (CCR) Anchor Standard 1: Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual

More information

Re-assessing Philip Larkin s Status as a Poet: A Study of His Poems

Re-assessing Philip Larkin s Status as a Poet: A Study of His Poems 14 Re-assessing Philip Larkin s Status as a Poet: A Study of His Poems Abstract: Pintu Karak M.A in English The University of Burdwan West Bengal Larkin belongs to the group of poets known as the Movement

More information

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold. The New Vocabulary Levels Test This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold. Example question see: They saw it. a. cut b. waited for

More information

College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards K-12 Montana Common Core Reading Standards (CCRA.R)

College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards K-12 Montana Common Core Reading Standards (CCRA.R) College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards K-12 Montana Common Core Reading Standards (CCRA.R) The K 12 standards on the following pages define what students should understand and be able to do by the

More information

Students performance in 2013 Literature in English, Papers 1, 2, and sample papers. Questions and answers

Students performance in 2013 Literature in English, Papers 1, 2, and sample papers. Questions and answers 9 Oct 2013 Students performance in 2013 Literature in English, Papers 1, 2, and 3 2016 sample papers Questions and answers 2 PAPER THREE Portfolio Generally reasoned and logically organized work Some well-researched

More information

American Romanticism

American Romanticism American Romanticism 1800-1860 Historical Background Optimism o Successful revolt against English rule o Room to grow Frontier o Vast expanse o Freedom o No geographic limitations Historical Background

More information

The Theater of the Absurd

The Theater of the Absurd The Theater of the Absurd The Theatre of the Absurd is a theatrical style originating in France in the late 1940s. It relies heavily on Existentialist philosophy, and is a category for plays of absurdist

More information

ENGLISH COURSE OBJECTIVES AND OUTCOMES KHEMUNDI COLLEGE; DIGAPAHANDI

ENGLISH COURSE OBJECTIVES AND OUTCOMES KHEMUNDI COLLEGE; DIGAPAHANDI 1 ENGLISH COURSE OBJECTIVES AND OUTCOMES KHEMUNDI COLLEGE; DIGAPAHANDI Semester -1 Core 1: British poetry and Drama (14 th -17 th century) 1. To introduce the student to British poetry and drama from the

More information

The Metamorphosis. Franz Kafka

The Metamorphosis. Franz Kafka The Metamorphosis Franz Kafka The life which is unexamined is not worth living. Socrates Did Gregor Samsa examine his life? Franz Kafka depicts the separation and alienation of modern man. Kafka delineates

More information

The art and study of using language effectively

The art and study of using language effectively The art and study of using language effectively Defining Rhetoric Aristotle defined rhetoric as the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion. Rhetoric is the art of communicating

More information

APHRA BEHN STAGE THE SOCIAL SCENE

APHRA BEHN STAGE THE SOCIAL SCENE PREFACE This study considers the plays of Aphra Behn as theatrical artefacts, and examines the presentation of her plays, as well as others, in the light of the latest knowledge of seventeenth-century

More information

V. The Intangible Heritage List of UNESCO

V. The Intangible Heritage List of UNESCO V. The Intangible Heritage List of UNESCO 1. The Intangible Cultural Heritage Inscribed as Masterpieces The Royal Government of Cambodia has submitted five arts forms for the World Intangible Cultural

More information

LITERATURE IN ENGLISH 9765/01 Paper 1 Poetry and Prose May/June hours Additional Materials: Answer Booklet/Paper

LITERATURE IN ENGLISH 9765/01 Paper 1 Poetry and Prose May/June hours Additional Materials: Answer Booklet/Paper www.xtremepapers.com Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge Pre-U Certificate *4357900068* LITERATURE IN ENGLISH 9765/01 Paper 1 Poetry and Prose May/June 2014 2 hours Additional Materials: Answer

More information

0397 English Literature November 2005 ENGLISH LITERATURE Paper 0397/01 Poetry, Prose and Drama... 1

0397 English Literature November 2005 ENGLISH LITERATURE Paper 0397/01 Poetry, Prose and Drama... 1 CONTENTS www.xtremepapers.com ENGLISH LITERATURE... 1 Paper 0397/01 Poetry, Prose and Drama... 1 FOREWORD This booklet contains reports written by Examiners on the work of candidates in certain papers.

More information

Gathering Voices Essays on Playback Theatre. Epilogue: The Journey to Deep Stories Jonathan Fox

Gathering Voices Essays on Playback Theatre. Epilogue: The Journey to Deep Stories Jonathan Fox Gathering Voices Essays on Playback Theatre Epilogue: The Journey to Deep Stories Jonathan Fox Edited by Jonathan Fox, M.A. and Heinrich Dauber, Ph.D. This material is made publicly available by the Centre

More information

BPS Interim Assessments SY Grade 2 ELA

BPS Interim Assessments SY Grade 2 ELA BPS Interim SY 17-18 BPS Interim SY 17-18 Grade 2 ELA Machine-scored items will include selected response, multiple select, technology-enhanced items (TEI) and evidence-based selected response (EBSR).

More information

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide

Much Ado About Nothing Notes and Study Guide William Shakespeare was born in the town of Stratford, England in. Born during the reign of Queen, Shakespeare wrote most of his works during what is known as the of English history. As well as exemplifying

More information

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Background of the Analysis As sound is the medium of music and color the medium of painting, language is the medium of literature. The only purpose of language is to communicate

More information

her seventeenth century forebears. Dickinson rages in her search for answers, challenging customary patterns of thought. Yet her poetry is often

her seventeenth century forebears. Dickinson rages in her search for answers, challenging customary patterns of thought. Yet her poetry is often In today s reading from the Gospel according to Matthew, we hear of the restoration of life to a dead woman, and the healing of the sick, transformations made possible by the power of faith, articulated

More information

Romeo and Juliet. William Shakespeare

Romeo and Juliet. William Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet William Shakespeare Author Bio Full Name: William Shakespeare Date of Birth: 1564 Place of Birth: Stratford-upon- Avon, England Date of Death: 1616 Brief Life Story Shakespeare s father

More information

10 th Grade CP SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS

10 th Grade CP SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS CP ENGLISH 10 10 th Grade CP SUMMER READING ASSIGNMENTS You will be working on 1 summer reading assignment. Before returning to school next school year, you will need to read The House on Mango Street

More information

12th Grade Language Arts Pacing Guide SLEs in red are the 2007 ELA Framework Revisions.

12th Grade Language Arts Pacing Guide SLEs in red are the 2007 ELA Framework Revisions. 1. Enduring Developing as a learner requires listening and responding appropriately. 2. Enduring Self monitoring for successful reading requires the use of various strategies. 12th Grade Language Arts

More information

Language Arts Literary Terms

Language Arts Literary Terms Language Arts Literary Terms Shires Memorize each set of 10 literary terms from the Literary Terms Handbook, at the back of the Green Freshman Language Arts textbook. We will have a literary terms test

More information

GEORGE HAGMAN (STAMFORD, CT)

GEORGE HAGMAN (STAMFORD, CT) BOOK REVIEWS 825 a single author, thus failing to appreciate Medea as a far more complex and meaningful representation of a woman, wife, and mother. GEORGE HAGMAN (STAMFORD, CT) MENDED BY THE MUSE: CREATIVE

More information

2011 Tennessee Section VI Adoption - Literature

2011 Tennessee Section VI Adoption - Literature Grade 6 Standard 8 - Literature Grade Level Expectations GLE 0601.8.1 Read and comprehend a variety of works from various forms Anthology includes a variety of texts: fiction, of literature. nonfiction,and

More information

Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing

Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing by Roberts and Jacobs English Composition III Mary F. Clifford, Instructor What Is Literature and Why Do We Study It? Literature is Composition that tells

More information

PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF KNOWLEDGE ADVANCED PLACEMENT LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION GRADE 12

PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF KNOWLEDGE ADVANCED PLACEMENT LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION GRADE 12 PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF KNOWLEDGE ADVANCED PLACEMENT LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION GRADE 12 For each section that follows, students may be required to analyze, recall, explain, interpret,

More information

The Picture of Dorian Gray

The Picture of Dorian Gray Teaching Oscar Wilde's from by Eva Richardson General Introduction to the Work Introduction to The Picture of Dorian Gr ay is a novel detailing the story of a Victorian gentleman named Dorian Gray, who

More information

Dance is the hidden language of the soul of the body. Martha Graham

Dance is the hidden language of the soul of the body. Martha Graham Program Background for presenter review Dance is the hidden language of the soul of the body. Martha Graham What is dance therapy? Dance therapy uses movement to improve mental and physical well-being.

More information

abc Mark Scheme English Literature 1741 Specification A General Certificate of Education Texts in Context Option A: Victorian Literature

abc Mark Scheme English Literature 1741 Specification A General Certificate of Education Texts in Context Option A: Victorian Literature Version 1 abc General Certificate of Education English Literature 1741 Specification A LTA1A Texts in Context Option A: Victorian Literature Mark Scheme 2010 examination - January series Mark schemes are

More information

Notes for teachers C3/12

Notes for teachers C3/12 General aim Notes for teachers C3/12 C: Understand a message Level of difficulty 3 Intermediate aim 1: Analyse a message 2: Find the elements in denotation and in connotation Operational aim Secondary

More information

Beautiful, Ugly, and Painful On the Early Plays of Jon Fosse

Beautiful, Ugly, and Painful On the Early Plays of Jon Fosse Zsófia Domsa Zsámbékiné Beautiful, Ugly, and Painful On the Early Plays of Jon Fosse Abstract of PhD thesis Eötvös Lóránd University, 2009 supervisor: Dr. Péter Mádl The topic and the method of the research

More information

CHAPTER 8 ROMANTICISM.

CHAPTER 8 ROMANTICISM. CHAPTER 8 ROMANTICISM. THREE GREAT ROMANTICS. At this stage we will move back again in time to the early nineteenth century before the arrival of French Realism - to the Romantic era. Romanticism was a

More information

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM (Ph.D.) IN ENGLISH AND LANGUAGE ARTS (INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM) (À Ÿμ À à æ.». 2547)

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM (Ph.D.) IN ENGLISH AND LANGUAGE ARTS (INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM) (À Ÿμ À à æ.». 2547) 55 DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM (Ph.D.) IN ENGLISH AND LANGUAGE ARTS (INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM) (À Ÿμ À à æ.». 2547) NAME Doctor of Philosophy Program in English and Language Arts À Ÿμ ª ÿ Æ ± μ «Õ ß ƒ» ª

More information

YDS DENEMELERİ 1. )We understand from the passage that paper production methods ) According to the passage, for people who are

YDS DENEMELERİ 1. )We understand from the passage that paper production methods ) According to the passage, for people who are YDS DENEMELERİ The invention of the printing press during the Renaissance, together with improved methods of manufacturing paper, made possible the rapid spread of knowledge. In 1476, William Caxton set

More information

Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize

Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize Allusion brief, often direct reference to a person, place, event, work of art, literature, or music which the author assumes the reader will recognize Analogy a comparison of points of likeness between

More information

Glossary of Literary Terms

Glossary of Literary Terms Alliteration Alliteration is the repetition of initial consonant sounds in accented syllables. Allusion An allusion is a reference within a work to something famous outside it, such as a well-known person,

More information

CHAPTER II REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE. and university levels. Before people attempt to define poem, they need to analyze

CHAPTER II REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE. and university levels. Before people attempt to define poem, they need to analyze CHAPTER II REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE 2.1 Poem There are many branches of literary works as short stories, novels, poems, and dramas. All of them become the main discussion and teaching topics in school

More information

Romeo and Juliet Week 1 William Shakespeare

Romeo and Juliet Week 1 William Shakespeare Name: Romeo and Juliet Week 1 William Shakespeare Day One- Five- Introduction to William Shakespeare Activity 2: Shakespeare in the Classroom (Day 4/5) Watch the video from the actors in Shakespeare in

More information

0486 LITERATURE (ENGLISH)

0486 LITERATURE (ENGLISH) UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS International General Certificate of Secondary Education MARK SCHEME for the October/November 2007 question paper 0486 LITERATURE (ENGLISH) 0486/03 Paper

More information

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject *2807084507* LITERATURE IN ENGLISH 9765/01 Paper 1 Poetry and Prose May/June 2012

More information

Purpose, Tone, & Value Words to Know

Purpose, Tone, & Value Words to Know 1. Admiring. To regard with wonder and delight. To esteem highly. 2. Alarmed Fear caused by danger. To frighten. 3. Always Every time; continuously; through all past and future time. 4. Amazed To fill

More information

School of Undergraduate Studies Ambedkar University Delhi

School of Undergraduate Studies Ambedkar University Delhi MODERNISM School of Undergraduate Studies Ambedkar University Delhi Course Code: EN 30 Course Coordinator: Usha Mudiganti (usha@aud.ac.in) The literature of experimental Modernism which emerged in the

More information

Visual Text Analysis - Children/Adolescent Literature. The visual texts I chose come from the children s books, The Velveteen Rabbit and Wherever

Visual Text Analysis - Children/Adolescent Literature. The visual texts I chose come from the children s books, The Velveteen Rabbit and Wherever Visual Text Analysis - Children/Adolescent Literature The visual texts I chose come from the children s books, The Velveteen Rabbit and Wherever You Are, my love will find you. I decided on these particular

More information

1. Plot. 2. Character.

1. Plot. 2. Character. The analysis of fiction has many similarities to the analysis of poetry. As a rule a work of fiction is a narrative, with characters, with a setting, told by a narrator, with some claim to represent 'the

More information

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Literature has some definitions. Roberts (1995: 1) in his book s Literature:

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION. Literature has some definitions. Roberts (1995: 1) in his book s Literature: CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION I.I. Background of the Analysis Literature has some definitions. Roberts (1995: 1) in his book s Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing states that literature refers

More information

Examiners Report June GCSE English Literature 5ET2F 01

Examiners Report June GCSE English Literature 5ET2F 01 Examiners Report June 2016 GCSE English Literature 5ET2F 01 Edexcel and BTEC Qualifications Edexcel and BTEC qualifications come from Pearson, the UK s largest awarding body. We provide a wide range of

More information

Tracks By Diane Lee Wilson

Tracks By Diane Lee Wilson A Curriculum Guide to Tracks By Diane Lee Wilson About the Book Shortly after the Civil War, Malachy laces on his father s boots and travels to the American West to work on the transcontinental railroad

More information

AXIOLOGY OF HOMELAND AND PATRIOTISM, IN THE CONTEXT OF DIDACTIC MATERIALS FOR THE PRIMARY SCHOOL

AXIOLOGY OF HOMELAND AND PATRIOTISM, IN THE CONTEXT OF DIDACTIC MATERIALS FOR THE PRIMARY SCHOOL 1 Krzysztof Brózda AXIOLOGY OF HOMELAND AND PATRIOTISM, IN THE CONTEXT OF DIDACTIC MATERIALS FOR THE PRIMARY SCHOOL Regardless of the historical context, patriotism remains constantly the main part of

More information

The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate.

The syllabus is approved for use in England, Wales and Northern Ireland as a Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate. www.xtremepapers.com Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge Pre-U Certificate *0123456789* LITERATURE IN ENGLISH (PRINCIPAL) 9765/01 Paper 1 Poetry and Prose For Examination from 2016 SPECIMEN

More information

Chopin s Artistry in The Story of an Hour. To be in conflict with traditional society s beliefs is difficult for many to do; however, author

Chopin s Artistry in The Story of an Hour. To be in conflict with traditional society s beliefs is difficult for many to do; however, author Tonya Flowers ENG 101 Prof. S. Lindsay Literary Analysis Paper 29 October 2006 Chopin s Artistry in The Story of an Hour To be in conflict with traditional society s beliefs is difficult for many to do;

More information

Why should I let the toad work 1 Squat on my life? Can't I use my wit as a pitchfork and drive the brute off?

Why should I let the toad work 1 Squat on my life? Can't I use my wit as a pitchfork and drive the brute off? Philip Larkin (1922-1985) Selected Poems Toads from The Less Deceived Why should I let the toad work 1 Squat on my life? Can't I use my wit as a pitchfork and drive the brute off? Six days of the week

More information

Romanticism & the American Renaissance

Romanticism & the American Renaissance Romanticism & the American Renaissance 1800-1860 Romanticism Washington Irving Fireside Poets James Fenimore Cooper Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau Walt Whitman Edgar Allan Poe Nathaniel Hawthorne

More information

Curriculum Map: Academic English 11 Meadville Area Senior High School English Department

Curriculum Map: Academic English 11 Meadville Area Senior High School English Department Curriculum Map: Academic English 11 Meadville Area Senior High School English Department Course Description: This year long course is specifically designed for the student who plans to pursue a college

More information

Category Exemplary Habits Proficient Habits Apprentice Habits Beginning Habits

Category Exemplary Habits Proficient Habits Apprentice Habits Beginning Habits Name Habits of Mind Date Self-Assessment Rubric Category Exemplary Habits Proficient Habits Apprentice Habits Beginning Habits 1. Persisting I consistently stick to a task and am persistent. I am focused.

More information

(Courtesy of an Anonymous Student. Used with permission.) Capturing Beauty

(Courtesy of an Anonymous Student. Used with permission.) Capturing Beauty (Courtesy of an Anonymous Student. Used with permission.) Capturing Beauty He had caught a far other butterfly than this. When the artist rose high enough to achieve the beautiful, the symbol by which

More information

Downloaded from

Downloaded from 1 SHORT WRITING TASKS INTERNATIONAL INDIANS SCHOOL, RIYADH ACADEMIC YEAR, 2013-2014 ENGLISH WORKSHEET ( CLASS X ) SECOND TERM 1. Your school is planning a 5-day trip to Jaipur, the Pink City. It is for

More information

Misc Fiction Irony Point of view Plot time place social environment

Misc Fiction Irony Point of view Plot time place social environment Misc Fiction 1. is the prevailing atmosphere or emotional aura of a work. Setting, tone, and events can affect the mood. In this usage, mood is similar to tone and atmosphere. 2. is the choice and use

More information