Poem 5 - Thomas Hardy - Neutral Tones Flashcards

1
Q

When was the poet alive?

A

1840-1928

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2
Q

When was the poem written?

A

1867, published in 1898

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3
Q

What is the poem about?

A

The narrator is recalling a day where he and his love stood by a pond, at the near end of their failing relationship, its likely from the description of her actions she got bored and left him. Whenever he gets hurt by love, he remembers the day by the pond.

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4
Q

Describe the form of the poem.

A

The poem is written from the point of view of a man addressing his past lover. With an A,B,B,A rhyme scheme.

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5
Q

Describe the structure of the poem.

A

The first 3 of the 4 stanzas follow a specific memory before a time jump to the final stanza where the narrator reflects on love in general. The poem ends where it began, with the pond, the cyclical structure shows how badly the breakup affected him, and that the breakups afterwards causes him to look back at it.

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6
Q

Describe the use of language about suffering.

A

The narrator uses language associated with pain, death and punishment, showing how badly he was hurt by the breakup.

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7
Q

How does the poet use language about lifelessness?

A

The neutral tone formed through the stillness and the greyness in the descriptions of the poem shows a lack of love between the narrator and his lover, showing his pessimism, which is reflected in the landscape, bleak, decaying and cold.

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8
Q

Why has the writer used “stood” (Line 1)?

A

The lack of movement contributes to the lifeless atmosphere.

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9
Q

How does the mention of “winter” (Line 1) reflect the narrator and his lover?

A

The two are emotionally cold to one another and reflects how their relationship froze to a halt.

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10
Q

What is suggested by “the sun was white,” (Line 2)?

A

“White” has connotations as being a cold colour, it suggests that the warmth has drained from the sun, which reflects how the love in their relationship had also drained away.

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11
Q

What does the poet suggest with “chidden of God” (Line 2)?

A

It is as though God had scolded the sun, this adds to the bleak mood, hinting at how the poet sees everything negatively.

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12
Q

What is the significance of “a few leaves lay” (Line 3)?

A

The alliteration of ‘L’ emphasises the stillness in the scene, which further’s the bleak mood.

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13
Q

What is the significance of “the starving sod;” (Line 3)?

A

The harsh sibilance shows the narrator’s suffering and emphasises the personification of the ground, which reflects their love-starved and dying relationship.

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14
Q

What is the importance of “an ash,” (Line 4)?

A

This links to ashes from a fire, mimicking how their love had burnt out.

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15
Q

What is the significance in the mention of “eyes” (Line 5)?

A

It subverts standard love poetry traditions, where eyes were a thing of beauty and positivity, whereas here they are shown negatively and only bring the narrator pain.

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16
Q

What is suggested by “rove// Over” (Lines 5 and 6)

A

The enjambment reflects how her eyes’ gaze moved over his face, the words are similar in how they look and sound which hints at the boredom she felt in being with him.

17
Q

What is the significance of “tedious riddles” (Line 6), “played” (Line 7) and “lost” (Line 8)?

A

The game imagery in stanza 2 subverts the expectations of playful love by contrasting it to the boredom present in the narrator’s relationship, their relationship became “tedious” and fell apart, they “lost”.

18
Q

What does “The smile on your mouth was the deadest thing” (Line 9) suggest?

A

The oxymoron suggests her complete lack of emotions for him, a smile shouldn’t be dead, which reinforces the neutral atmosphere.

19
Q

What is the significance of “Alive enough to have strength to die;” (Line 10)?

A

The juxtaposition shows the narrator’s bitterness towards the lover, it suggests that he blames her for the end of their relationship, in the same way she let her smile die, she may have also chosen to end their relationship.

20
Q

What is suggested by “ominous bird a-wing” (Line 12)?

A

The imagery of the bird flying away reflects her leaving him as the relationship ends.

21
Q

What is shown by the ellipsis in Line 12?

A

It represents a time shift between stanzas 3 and 4.

22
Q

What does “keen lessons” (Line 13) suggest about how the poet feels about the memory now that time has passed?

A

“keen” means sharp or strong, it’s possible that the lessons were painful for him, and he found it difficult to move on.

23
Q

What does “love deceives,” (Line 13) suggest about the poet’s opinions on love?

A

“deceives” shows he no longer trusts love and has become more pessimistic in his view of it.

24
Q

What effect does “wrings with wrong,” (Line 14) have on the reader?

A

The alliteration draws the reader’s focus in order to emphasise the pain and anguish he felt.

25
Q

What is suggested by “shaped to me// your face,” (Lines 14 and 15)?

A

That other experiences of deceitful love remind him of this incident by the pond, possibly because it was the first time he experienced it.

26
Q

What does “God-curst” (Line 15) suggest about how the narrator’s feelings have changed over time?

A

The “t” in “curst” is a harsher sound than “chidden” (Line 2) which hints that he has become more bitter with time.

27
Q

What is the effect of starting the last line with “And a pond” (Line 16)?

A

The is cyclical, it starts and ends with remembering the pond, which reflects the narrator’s inability to move on.

28
Q

What is suggested by the “greyish leaves.” (Line 16)?

A

The “greyish leaves” repeat how the leaves in stanza 1 were grey. They were grey because they had rotted, in the same way that the poet’s relationship had. Ending the poem this way emphasises this decay.