Sunday, September 1, 2019
Powerful and moving poem Essay
à The vulnerability of a country that is vast and until this point as pointed out ââ¬Å"in worth and nameâ⬠. Though time has passed and ââ¬Å"smokes dark bruise/ has paledâ⬠, it is a ââ¬Å"woundâ⬠that is exposed beneath such bruising. The personification of the smoke highlights the weakness in humans, and then being carried onto the country itself, yet it is ââ¬Å"soothedâ⬠by nature, ââ¬Å"dabbed at and eased by rainâ⬠. It is as if the environment is attempting to heal the ââ¬Ëexposed woundââ¬â¢. However the use of yet use of the word ââ¬Å"exposingâ⬠highlights the scale of this devastation; it is as though it has been uncovered and peeled back- the countryââ¬â¢s vulnerability is exposed and it is manifested in destruction and loss. The fact that the smoke ââ¬Å"has paledâ⬠highlights that time has passed in which the wound has become clear to onlookers, and this wound is not only literal but metaphorical- the country is injured and was exposed to threat at that precise moment. The image of the ââ¬Ëhalf-excoriated Apple Macââ¬â¢ is presented as a metaphor for the attack that has affected the big apple. The Apple-Mac is ââ¬Å"half ââ¬âexcoriatedâ⬠- flayed, stripped of its skin, much like the country itself. The word ââ¬Å"excoriatedâ⬠is almost onomatopoeic as it mimics the stripped flesh (which is associated with great pain). This would cause great grief across the intended audience, and it will most likely bring back memories across the listeners. It is also significant that the Apple-Mac is described to have been ââ¬Å"half ââ¬âexcoriatedâ⬠- flayed, stripped of its skin, which is a similarity at this point of time as the country itself; America. The fact that the computer ââ¬Ëstill quotesââ¬â¢ Dow Jones, although it would take one personââ¬â¢s knowledge to know that the stock markets that day had crashed. This will also show how not only did America suffer from the losses, and ruin, but they did financially. The use of ââ¬Å"hindsightâ⬠and ââ¬Å"retrospectâ⬠in the sixth and seventh stanzas is indicative of the time that has passed to now look back upon the attack, perhaps in disbelief, shock, horror, and in some aspects we find ourselves awing and this suggested by the reference to the ââ¬Å"weird prospect / of a passenger plane beading an office blockâ⬠. The ââ¬Å"forceâ⬠is a nameless enemy, it does not have shape or form or identifying features and this reinforces its threat and perhaps its inevitability ââ¬Å"moving headlong forwards, locked on a collision courseâ⬠. The use of locked creates the impression that such a ââ¬Å"collision courseâ⬠is indeed inescapable- there is no getting away from that which is locked, it is immoveable and in this case pre-destined. In the Last stanza Armitage recalls the time when television footage showed helpless victims jumping from the flaming towers. The worlds which ââ¬Å"thinned to an instantâ⬠make ââ¬Å"furious contactâ⬠- this implies a fusion of anger and great energy, the fury spelling out wrath and pain. â⬠. This moment of time is explored by Armitage in the final stanza; ââ¬Å"during whichâ⬠- highlighting the passage of time in which the media ââ¬Å"framed/ moments of graceâ⬠. ââ¬Å"Earth and heaven fused. â⬠Armitage draws together celestial and earthly beings in the collision of earth and sky, life and death, terror and peace to mere ââ¬Å"moments. Here the knowledge of the reader is called upon as one recalls the television footage of helpless victims jumping from the flaming towers. From this we determine that Armitage has made this poem with a hidden yearn to try and move the reader and intended audience with his strong choice of words. Whilst being simplistic, they are ââ¬Ëgivenââ¬â¢ power by the genre and situation they are put into. By Arjun Nazran 10H Page of 2 Show preview only The above preview is unformatted text This student written piece of work is one of many that can be found in our GCSE Other Poets section.
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