Sunday, May 26, 2019
Essay on “Pike” by Ted Hughes
The poesy Pike describes the fish of the same name and the poets feelings ab out(a) them, fishing and the brutality of some little ones he had as pets, which after grew out of entertain, indeed they sp be nobody. The rime seems to be about nature, ponds and lily pads, scarce this is non a truly pastoral poem as it is not solely about the beauty and innocence of nature the tone is dark, deep as England and compensate terrifying, the hair frozen on my head for what might melt down. The grammatical construction of the poem seems regular each verse has four lines.However, the line length, though at kickoff it looks regular, is in fact irregular, ranging from five syllables to thirteen syllables. This inequality adds to the nauseous tone of the poem, creating an aural sensation of something hiding within the longer lines, mirroring the way in which the throughway lurks under the waters surface, logged on concluding yrs black leaves, watching upwards. The first two stanzas f inish with a full stop, which creates the sensation of control control.This suggests that the poet has control of the dangerous fish, killers from the egg, at this stage, when the pike he describes are three inches long, perfect. However, by the fifth stanza, when the poet retells his anecdote about the pike we kept behind glass, at first there are three, then suddenly there were two and finally one, (as it has eaten the others), and this ruthless, cannibal fish, unlike any traditional pet, moves directly into the undermentioned stanza, with a sag belly and the grin it was born with.In this next stanza, the sixth, the poet warns the reader that the pike spare nobody. The fishs brutality is echoed by the poems form at this point the vicious pike has dominated the fish tank and now dominates the poem, refusing to follow the previous, neat form and escapes from one stanza to the next.Later in the poem the stanzas continue to run seamlessly into each other with enjambement, dead in t he willow-herb- one jammed past its gills down the others gullet, implying that the poet is losing control of the carnivorous fish and its submarine slenderness and standoff. This is a rather long poem, with eleven stanzas, and the poet uses the extended description that runs throughout the whole poem, to emphasise the size of the pike six pounds each, over two feet long and their old age, thereby evoking his sense of being in awe of the fishs submarine delicacy and horror.This poem focuses on the pike, describing them in close detail, green tigering the gold, and only in the fifth person does the poet introduce the first person, we, (and in the ordinal stanza, I). However, from the start, the poets choice of style makes clear his feelings about the fish he shows awe through the use of irresponsible language such as perfect, and gold and emerald, which have connotations of precious wealth.He describes pike as stunned by their own grandeur, implying that he thinks the fish are self-conscious and even arrogant, his use of the verb stunned here is almost personification, as if the poet thinks the fish can have the same self-awareness as a human. On the other hand, positive language such as dance and grandeur is juxtaposed against an underlying mood of darkness and evil, which enters the poem in its third line when the fish are presented as killers from the egg and malevolent.Therefore in the first three stanzas, the poets attitude is contrasting, seeing both delicacy and horror in the pike. However, in the quaternary stanza the poet admits that the jaws hooked clamp and fangs are not to be changed at this date and this marks a turning point in the poem, with the mood changing to in all negative, and finally, fearful, with the simile as a vice locks and talking of iron instrument and, explicitly, death.By the ninth stanza the poet says directly that he is afraid, I dared not whorl. He describes also the hair frozen on my head and the sensation of someth ing that rose slowly toward me, watching, he presents this as a dream, but the deliver conveyed to the reader is more of a nightmare. The poets feeling of fear is highlighted by his description of the dark pond coupled with the repetition of darkness.Essay on Pike by Ted HughesThe poem Pike describes the fish of the same name and the poets feelings about them, fishing and the brutality of some little ones he had as pets, which later grew out of control, indeed they spare nobody. The poem seems to be about nature, ponds and lily pads, but this is not a truly pastoral poem as it is not only about the beauty and innocence of nature the tone is dark, deep as England and even terrifying, the hair frozen on my head for what might move. The structure of the poem seems regular each verse has four lines.However, the line length, though at first it looks regular, is in fact irregular, ranging from five syllables to thirteen syllables. This difference adds to the uneasy tone of the poem, crea ting an aural sensation of something hiding within the longer lines, mirroring the way in which the pike lurks under the water?s surface, logged on last year?s black leaves, watching upwards. The first two stanzas finish with a full stop, which creates the sensation of control control.This suggests that the poet has control of the dangerous fish, killers from the egg, at this stage, when the pike he describes are three inches long, perfect. However, by the fifth stanza, when the poet retells his anecdote about the pike we kept behind glass, at first there are three, then suddenly there were two and finally one, (as it has eaten the others), and this ruthless, cannibal fish, unlike any traditional pet, moves directly into the next stanza, with a sag belly and the grin it was born with.In this next stanza, the sixth, the poet warns the reader that the pike spare nobody. The fish?s brutality is echoed by the poem?s form at this point the vicious pike has dominated the fish tank and no w dominates the poem, refusing to follow the previous, neat form and escapes from one stanza to the next.Later in the poem the stanzas continue to run seamlessly into each other with enjambement, dead in the willow-herb- one jammed past its gills down the other?s gullet, implying that the poet is losing control of the carnivorous fish and its submarine delicacy and horror. This is a rather long poem, with eleven stanzas, and the poet uses the extended description that runs throughout the whole poem, to emphasise the size of the pike six pounds each, over two feet long and their old age, thereby evoking his sense of being in awe of the fish?s submarine delicacy and horror.This poem focuses on the pike, describing them in close detail, green tigering the gold, and only in the fifth person does the poet introduce the first person, we, (and in the eighth stanza, I). However, from the start, the poet?s choice of language makes clear his feelings about the fish he shows awe through the us e of positive language such as perfect, and gold and emerald, which have connotations of precious wealth.He describes pike as stunned by their own grandeur, implying that he thinks the fish are self-aware and even arrogant, his use of the verb stunned here is almost personification, as if the poet thinks the fish can have the same self-awareness as a human. On the other hand, positive language such as dance and grandeur is juxtaposed against an underlying mood of darkness and evil, which enters the poem in its third line when the fish are presented as killers from the egg and malevolent.Therefore in the first three stanzas, the poet?s attitude is contrasting, seeing both delicacy and horror in the pike. However, in the fourth stanza the poet admits that the jaws? hooked clamp and fangs are not to be changed at this date and this marks a turning point in the poem, with the mood changing to wholly negative, and finally, fearful, with the simile as a vice locks and talking of iron inst rument and, explicitly, death.By the ninth stanza the poet says directly that he is afraid, I dared not cast. He describes also the hair frozen on my head and the sensation of something that rose slowly toward me, watching, he presents this as a dream, but the experience conveyed to the reader is more of a nightmare. The poet?s feeling of fear is highlighted by his description of the dark pond coupled with the repetition of darkness.
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