Assisi TQ version Flashcards

1
Q

What is the situation in the poem: what is happening (2)

A
  • A disabled beggar is sitting outside a church (1)

* He is being ignored by all those around him, even though as Christian’s they should be caring for him (1)

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2
Q

In your own words, explain what the beggar described in lines 1 – 4 looks like. (3)

A

• He is tiny (1), has mis-shapen hands (1), his legs are too small and lumpy and disfigured. (1)

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3
Q

With reference to the text, explain how the poet tries to create a sympathy in the read for the beggar in lines 1-4. (4)

A
  • “dwarf” – handicapped, small, suggests pity
  • “hands on backwards” – useless
  • “slumped” – can’t even sit up
  • “half-filled sack” misshapen and lumpy, disfigured
  • “tiny twisted legs” – small and useless
  • “as if sawdust might run” – not even human
  • 1 mark for each reference and for each comment
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4
Q

Looks at lines 7-9. What tone do you detect in these lines?(1)

A

• humour / black humour / irony (1)

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5
Q

Quote the phrase that shows where the beggar is located, and explain the irony of lines 6-7 (in honour of St Francis, brother of the poor) (2)

A
  • “outside the three tiers of churches built in honour of St Francis” (1)
  • The saint was “brother to the poor” yet no-one is helping the beggar (1)
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6
Q

How do these lines help you to understand the poet’s own feelings in the poem? (1)

A

• Successful answers will illustrate that he disapproves (1)

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7
Q

What impression do we get of the priest in lines 10-17. Justify your response with reference to the text. (2)

A
  • Hypocrite / negative impression
  • Focused on spreading word of God to “illiterate” whilst ignoring need for charity in front of him
  • Sophisticated answers may comment on uselessness of painting “frescoes” to tell stories to those who can’t read – teach to read instead?
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8
Q

“A rush of tourists, clucking contentedly,
fluttered after him as he scattered
the grain of the Word”

  • Explain fully the comparison, and what impression you think it gives of the tourists. (3)
A
  • Metaphor compares tourists to chickens (1)
  • Suggests unthinking, stupid, accepting whatever they are told (1)
  • Tourists are more interested in looking like good Christians than in being good Christians. (1)
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9
Q

MacCaig, in Assisi, is making a statement about the apathy (uncaring or disinterested nature) of society. Quote the phrase from ll 18-27 which you think best sums up this apathy. (1)

A

• “It was they who had passed the ruined temple outside” (1)

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10
Q

Identify one area of contrast within the poem, and explain what point MacCaig is trying to make

A
  • Dwarf is outside “three tiers of churches” and is himself describe as a “ruined temple”
  • He is ugly but his voice is sweet and innocent
  • Rich tourists ignore poor beggar
  • Caring nature of Christianity contrasted against hypocrisy of organised religion
  • (any one contrast, supported with evidence, for two marks)
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11
Q

“the dwarf”

A

Positioning at the start - immediately identifies the character as being unusually small.
word choice
- used in folk lore to represent a small ugly like creature

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12
Q

“his hands on backwards”

A

alliteration - draws attention to his deformity

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13
Q

“backwards”

A

word choice- connotations of being stunted physically and intellectually.

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14
Q

“sat, slumped”

A

alliteration - emphasis his collapsed position

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15
Q

“slumped”

A

word choice - meaning unable to sit up . he is drooping, collapsed, also has connotations of depresssion

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16
Q

“half - filled”

A

word choice- suggest his life is unfulfilled, dissatisfied, incomplete

17
Q

“tiny twisted legs”

A

alliteration draws attention to his deformed legs as being small, wraped and useless

18
Q

“slumped like a half-filled sack.. from which sawdust might run”

A

simile- comparing the small man to a half finished, inadequate bag - doesn’t have enough substance to sit u. Suggestion that he isn’t human

19
Q

“A priest explained”

A

Word choice - use of “A” - indefinite article - gives an imprecise impression that it could be any priest?the church

20
Q

“the illiterate”

A

word choice - suggesting that all public were uniformed, uneducated, ignorant.

21
Q

“goodness of god/”suffering of His Son”

A

Alliteration - emphasisies the irony that the Church is ignoring the plight of “the dwarf”

22
Q

“His frescoes tell stories”

A

word choice/ irony - real life story of “ the dwarf” should be far more compelling.

23
Q

“A rush” (of tourists)

A

suggests an urgency/ speed of the tourists not real contemplation of St Francis’s work

24
Q

“clucking”

A

metaphor/word choice - comparing tourists to chickens mindlessly following the crowd.

25
Q

“clucking contentedly”

A

alliteration - emphasising the tourists merrily chatting instead of focusing on the religious aspect of their visit.

26
Q

“fluttered”

A

metaphor/ word choice - extends the image of the tourists as birds. Also suggests their following of the priest is frivolous and light-hearted rather than listening seriously

27
Q

“he scattered the grain of the Word”

A

extended metaphor focus must be on the tourists and not the priest. Tourists like chickens taking the Priest’s speech on the bible.

28
Q

“They”

A

word choice- makes the tourists seem almost faceless anonymous

29
Q

“passed”

A

word choice - taking no notice, ignoring the plight of the dwarf

30
Q

Commonality

A
  • the temporariness/ insignificance of man
  • the relationship between the man and the other species, man and nature
  • the randomness of the process of evolution
  • the scale of human evolution vs species which have remained unchanged/unevolved