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Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood

T.S.Eliot 1888-1965

Unseen Poetry

What does Unseen mean?


It

will be a poem you have probably never seen before You are being tested on your ability to read and respond thoughtfully You are thinking about what the writer is trying to say Every word of the poem will count

The Question

Write about the poem and its effect on you.

You may wish to include some or all of these points: The poems content what it is about The ideas the poet may have wanted us to think about The mood or atmosphere of a poem How it is written words or phrases you find interesting, the way the poem is structured or organised Your response to the poem

Content
What

its about What happens in each section Is there an order or sequence? Whos speaking? Story or idea?

Ideas
What

did the poet want us to think about?

Is

it a story or an idea or an expression of an emotion?


Is

there a message?

Mood and atmosphere


What

is the tone of the poem? How does it make you feel as you read it? Think about the 5 senses Think about the setting

How it is written
Dont

just list or spot techniques Pick out words or phrases that you find effective and try to say why Think about the sound and rhythm of the poem. Does it have a beat? Or is it disjointed? Look at repetition of sounds or words

Imagery: a quick reminder


An image in poetry (or in writing generally) is a picture in the readers mind created by the words used. Literal images can be effective ; roses in snow. The reader sees this in an uncomplicated way. Similes and metaphors are figurative images they are built on comparison : SIMILE The pigeon bursts like a city METAPHOR The sun died - this is also an example of personification

How it is written 2
Think

about the structure or form Is it regular, uneven, awkward or easy to read. Does that tie in with the content? Look at the first line of each stanza to see how the meaning develops Look at the title and last line to give you a clue as to what the writer intended

Your Response
Its perfectly acceptable to say you find a poem confusing or misleading if you can explain why Try to be positive about some aspect of the poem or explain how you relate to an idea or event in it Uses phrases to show your sadness, surprise, enjoyment, anger, frustration, empathy The examiner basically wants to know you have read and thought about this poem

Things you should NEVER write!


At first I didnt understand the poem but after reading it a couple of times I think The poem has no rhythm I think the poem needed to rhyme more because I like poems that rhyme I think the poet has done a very good job of writing this poem and they obviously thought carefully about it

Ok so lets try an example


It is absolutely essential to get into the habit of reading the poem at least twice before even trying to think of what you will write. Try to hear the poem aloud in your head notice how it makes you feel and which words felt important as you read it.

TRAMP
By William Marshall

He liked he said rainbows and the sky and children who passed him in the street without staring. And he liked he said the ordinary things

like roses in snow and the way he remembered the first time the first time he really smelt the rain on a green hillside back home just before the sun died

And he liked he said thinking about who slept beneath the red brick roofs he walked by in the early part of the day from Lands End to John OGroats. but he said as a full time tramp with no other place to go he was worried where he would die Lands End or John OGroats.

Start by annotating .
Tramp
Like a child a simple treat
Any tramp no name The speaker is someone reporting The tramps opinions

He liked he said rainbows and the sky and children who passed him in the street without staring.

Most children stare - likes the ones who dont why?

Using P-E-E
Making

sure you always use P-E-E-L statements in the poetry question

How to score
sustained

response to situation/ideas or author's purposes effective use of details to support answer explanation of features of language interest explanation of effects achieved/authors' purposes

How to score
qualified, developed response, exploring writers' ideas or methods details from poem linked to authors' intentions and purposes exploration of effects achieved/authors' purposes qualified/exploratory response to writers' ideas or methods

Check your response


Have

you explained? Have you used details? Is your writing on the poem sustained? Are you beginning to explore? Do you evaluate the writers techniques?

Remember:
Read

the poem carefully more than once Annotate the poem quickly In the exam, you have 45 minutes in total Spend 5 mins reading the poem and annotating Think about the poem.

Writing your answer


Use

P-E-E-L throughout Dont panic if you dont get it all it is not a trick!

Practice makes perfect


Practise annotating poems. Remember to annotate in different ways: questions, points, meanings, links, language techniques, poets ideas Thinking about the poems and questioning the ideas in them will help you be more confident in the exam.

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