Wednesday, August 21, 2019
Tropical Death and Mid-Term Break | Analysis
Tropical Death and Mid-Term Break | Analysis Compare and contrast the presentation of death and grief in both poems In this essay I will be comparing and contrasting the presentation of death and grief in the two poems, ââ¬ËTropical Death and ââ¬ËMid-Term Break. Grace Nichols, the poet of ââ¬ËTropical Death, was born in Guyana, 1950, and then migrated to England at the age of 27. In all of her writing, her own history and that of her country have clearly had a profound impact as she says, ââ¬Å"I am a writer across two worlds; I just cant forget my Caribbean culture and past, so theres this contrast interaction between the two worlds: Britain and the Caribbean.â⬠Seamus Heaney, the poet of ââ¬ËMid Term Break, was born in Ireland in 1939 as the eldest of nine children. Many of his works concern his own family history as well and also seems to focus on characters in his own family: they can be read as elegies for those family members. The content of both the poems presents the themes of death and grief. Both poems deal with two poetic voices discussing and dealing with death. In ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠she is planning the end of her life whereas in ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠he is dealing with the loss of his brother. In ââ¬ËTropical Death, the content consists of a Caribbean ââ¬Å"black womanâ⬠wanting ââ¬Å"a brilliant tropical deathâ⬠. Grace Nichols discusses going back to her home country because she is planning the end of her life and would like a dramatic, traditional death. I think this as she suggests so much of her own death that the reader presumes she has come to the end of her life. I, as a reader, find the poetic voice in the category of integrity. This is because she is feeling ready for her own death and is hence planning for it. We also know she wants a dramatic death because it says, ââ¬Å"no quiet jerk tear wiping, a polite hearse withdrawalâ⬠, proving the woman wants an ââ¬Ëover the top end to her life. The poetic voice wants a tragic death, as it also states ââ¬Å"all the sleepless droning/ red-eyed wake nightsâ⬠. This suggests vigil. In ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠the content consists of an account of a family tragedy. In the poem the poetic voice attends the funeral of his younger brother who, at the age of four, was run over. We know this because it says ââ¬Å"my mother held my handâ⬠, ââ¬Å"met my father cryingâ⬠, ââ¬Å"they were ââ¬Ësorry for my troubleâ⬠and ââ¬Å"I was the eldestâ⬠. All these quotes tell us, as the reader, what the family is going through. This makes us feel pathos for the poetic voice. The poetic voice is actually Heaneys own as this really did happen in his life. This make the peace feel more heart-felt and emotional because all these things Heaney talks about were real. The ideas the poets may have wanted us to think about presents the themes of death and grief. In ââ¬ËTropical Death, an idea Nichols wanted us to think about was how she knows and has identified the way in which she would like to die. ââ¬Å"Woman wantâ⬠, she is portrayed as always wanting which shows pride, determination, self-radiance, independence and strength. She had thought so much about her death that she knows every detail, down to what dress she would like to wear, ââ¬Å"blue sea dress/ to wrap her neatâ⬠. When I first read this I thought the poetic voice meant she wanted to drown, ââ¬Å"dressâ⬠being the waves and ââ¬Å"neatâ⬠meaning to take her life quickly and painlessly. Yet having re-read it, I realised the woman was actually just referring to her plans for her traditional Caribbean outfit in which she wanted to be buried in. In ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠, an idea Heaney wanted us to think about was the imagery used to express ideas of death . Heaney uses a metaphor to describe the only mark on the boys body, ââ¬Å"poppy bruiseâ⬠. This is also the only colour talked about in the piece which makes this one mark more intense. It says he had ââ¬Å"no gaudy scarsâ⬠because ââ¬Å"the bumper knocked him clearâ⬠and having this one little bruise, although it was probably quite small, seems extremely vivid and sickening. The colour also contrasts with the boys skin, which is described by the poetic voice as ââ¬Å"paler nowâ⬠. This also emphasises the ââ¬Å"poppy bruiseâ⬠for us, as the reader, to imagine the mark to stand out quite spectacularly. Another image Heaney wants use to imagine is the four foot box, which is alliteration. This device emphasises the negative tone and harsh nature, making the thought of this coffin more believable and realistic. My favorite device Heaney uses is onomatopoeia; ââ¬Å"whispersâ⬠, ââ¬Å"coughedâ⬠, ââ¬Å"sighsâ⬠. This helps create the effect th at we are actually there, hearing what the poetic voice is hearing. It makes the scene so much more real, again, like we are actually there- this emphasises the quite sadness. The mood and atmosphere of both poems present the themes of death and grief. In ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠the mood is quite exotic and I, as a reader, could almost imagine a Caribbean woman saying these things. This was because it was written in a language that captures the Caribbean dialect, but I will go on to write more about this later on. Grace writes, ââ¬Å"No quiet jerk tear wipingâ⬠. This is not ââ¬ËStandard English, emphasizing the Caribbean influence, and there is no punctuation throughout the piece. The mood is tropical, the writer talks about ââ¬Å"heatâ⬠and ââ¬Å"coolâ⬠and ââ¬Å"shadeâ⬠which suggests the temperature, making the reader feel as if we are there, in the Caribbean. The mood is also quite upbeat, with colourful words such as; ââ¬Å"brilliantâ⬠, ââ¬Å"blue sea dressâ⬠and ââ¬Å"red eyedâ⬠. This vibrant text makes us think of the bright colours on the island. After ââ¬Å"all the sleepless droningâ⬠the moo d softens, ââ¬Å"her mothers sweet breastâ⬠, ââ¬Å"cool blessâ⬠. These peaceful descriptions lower the tension levels to make the last couplet seem stronger. In ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠there is a noticeable change in atmosphere between stanza five and stanza six. In the first five stanzas the atmosphere is tense and cold as the ââ¬Å"ambulance arrivedâ⬠and the arrival of the corpse ââ¬Å"stanched and bandagedâ⬠. The energy level of the poetic voice is low throughout these first five stanzas, like the poetic voice is tired and drowned from all that is going on. However, in the final few stanzas the atmosphere changes peaceful, ââ¬Å"snowdropsâ⬠, ââ¬Å"candles soothedâ⬠, ââ¬Å"he layâ⬠. These bring down the tension levels as we picture the calm, relaxed mood around the cot. Heaney uses pathos, ââ¬Å"I met my father cryingâ⬠. This emphasises the bleak tone of the poem, playing on the readers feelings. How the poems are written present the themes of death and grief. The poem ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠has a refrain which is repeated at the start of every stanza (except for the fifth one). Having the same line every time we start a new paragraph of the poem helps us, as a reader, to be brought back to what the whole poem is about, as a constant reminder. This repetition is an eternal rhyme and its a connotation of death. It is also alliteration, a device Nichols uses throughout her poem. The refrain also stands out due to its stressed syllables, which are short and staccato vowel sounds. The ââ¬Ët and the ââ¬Ëk letters make the beat hard and unappealing. Repetition is thought to originate from the call and response tradition of Africa; it could be a big part in her writing due to Grace Nichols background. The poem also hints at several lovely parts of death; ââ¬Å"blue sea dress/ to wrap her neatâ⬠, ââ¬Å"polite hearseâ⬠, ââ¬Å"in the heart/ of her mothers sweet breastâ⬠, ââ¬Å"in the shade/ of the sun leafs cool blessâ⬠, ââ¬Å"in the bloom/ of her peoples bloodrestâ⬠. This tells me, as a reader, that ââ¬Å"the fat black womanâ⬠awaits the end of her life with dignity, her head held high having fulfilled her planned life and is subsequently planning her own death for when it may arrive. The structure of ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠is divided into five stanzas and one ending couplet. Stanza one, two, three and four all start with the line ââ¬Å"the fat black woman wantâ⬠. The fifth stanza doesnt start with this but then the couplet does, also the fourth and fifth stanzas are longer than the first, second and third. This could be to emphasise the final image more, by giving the reader a break from the refrain and also the length of the two stanzas before outline the short and snappiness of the ending couplet. This break is to not detract from the message and there is also no punctuation in the couplet, this is so the reader is left with a strong image. This image has been building up throughout the piece, ââ¬Å"the fat black woman want/ a brilliant tropical death yesâ⬠. ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠is written in a language that captures the Caribbean dialect. It uses some unfamiliar vocabulary, e.g. ââ¬Ëhibiscus is a plant native to warm tropical regions; ââ¬Ëblue sea dress is a traditional African dress. It creates as strong sense of the voice of the speaker. It clearly sets the poem in a culture other than that represented by ââ¬ËStandard English. By using a mixture of Standard English and a dialect form it emphasises a particular idea, in this poem the idea is of wanting to go back to her home country. This technique gives a sense of the dual ââ¬Ëvoice that the poet possesses. Nichols enjoys exploring these cultural differences: ââ¬ËI like working in both Standard English and Creole. I tend to want to fuse the two tongues because I come from a background where the tw o worlds were constantly interacting, though Creole was regarded, obviously, as the inferior of the colonial powers when I was growing up. In ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠the rhyme scheme is non-existent. I believe this is to make the tone of the piece more serious and grown up. It is written like an episode rather than a poem. This highlights the realist mood and atmosphere. The finishing couplet is more memorable as the middle is slower and bland. The rhyming couplet seems to sooth. Heaney writes, ââ¬Å"No gaudy scars, the bumper knocked him clear/ A four foot box, a foot for every yearâ⬠. This decreases the tension and affirms the ending of the peace. The dialect is Standard English, with punctuation. This helps us to imagine the poetic voice to live somewhere cold and unappealing because the language used is harsh and unwelcoming. How the poems are similar presents the themes of death and grief. Both poems finish with a punchy line, to leave the reader with an image to take with them. In ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠this is the fact that the poetic voice wants to go back to her home country to die in a traditional way yet in ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠this is the fact that a boy has died young from a tragic accident. These final images conclude both poems strongly. Both poems have a similar layout, with regular stanzas and a final shorter stanza. Both poems overall talk about the same things, but ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠discusses in a more up-beat, lively and natural sort of way- it is the natural order of life. Whereas, in Heaneys poem, it is written in a more dejected and sad kind of way. How the poems are different present the themes of death and grief. In Nichols poem she talks about the planning of her death whereas in Heaneys poem he talks about a boy who has died young- his life was cut tragically short, without any notice. Nichols is basically saying all that the boy in Heaneys poem had, she doesnt want. She says ââ¬Å"not a cold sojourn/ in some North Europe far/forlornâ⬠. That is exactly what the little boy in Heaneys poem got. Nichols says she doesnt want ââ¬Å"a polite hearseâ⬠and yet thats what Heaneys poem has, ââ¬Å"sorry for my troubleâ⬠, ââ¬Å"whispersâ⬠. The ââ¬Å"fat black womanâ⬠wants ââ¬Å"some bawlâ⬠, ââ¬Å"Sleepless droningâ⬠unlike the boy had in Heaneys poem, ââ¬Å"coughed out tearless sighsâ⬠, ââ¬Å"I was embarrassedâ⬠. All these things prove that everything Heaney describes in his poem is everything Nichols is saying she doesnt want; both poems sum up the cultural norms. Our culture is pr esented in Heaneys poem as cold, ââ¬Å"snowdropsâ⬠with lots of secrecy, ââ¬Å"whispersâ⬠, and this contrast greatly with Nichols culture which is described as lively and welcoming. The coldness and grayness hit us in Heaneys poem, ââ¬Å"no gaudy scarsâ⬠and white ââ¬Å"snowdropsâ⬠. This is such a contrast from Nichols vivid and warm piece, ââ¬Å"heatâ⬠, ââ¬Å"tropicalâ⬠. In ââ¬Å"Mid Term Breakâ⬠there is tension, ââ¬Å"embarrassedâ⬠, there is forced politeness and secrecy. It is a hint that we dont have a welcoming culture, unlike Nichols culture, ours seems cold and behind doors, ââ¬Å"a cold sojournâ⬠as described in ââ¬Å"Tropical Deathâ⬠. In conclusion, these two poems present death and grief in two different ways- we hear the negativity of Heaneys traumatic experience, which completely contrasts with Nichols positive request to return to her homeland for her death.
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