Bayonet Charge by Ted Hughes Flashcards

1
Q

Themes in Bayonet Charge

A
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2
Q

Form and Structure in Bayonet Charge:

A
  • The poem begins in “media-res”
  • Bayonet Charge by Ted Hughes is written in the 3rd person
  • Lines are uneven and sporadic, using enjambement and caesura
  • The poem has an irregular rhythm, reflecting panic or struggle
  • Initial feelings of pride at the start of the poem soon to turn to fear
  • The second stanza details confusion
  • The final stanza explores a lack of focus
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3
Q

Context in Bayonet Charge:

A
  • Ted Hughes’ Bayonet Charge was written and published in 1957
  • The poem focuses on WWI
  • Ted Hughes was born in 1930 and died in 1998
  • He was Poet Laureate in 1984
  • Hughes’ father had served in WWI
  • Hughes wanted to highlight the brutality of trench warfare as a tribute to his father’s suffering as well as a way to memorialize war as a warning for future generations
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4
Q

“Suddenly he awoke”

A
  • Fast paced start - as if he is in a confused or vulnerable state.
  • Event seems like a nightmare but this confirms it is real.
    *
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5
Q

“In raw-seamed hot khaki, his sweat heavy”

A
  • Alliteration of R and H sounds gives sense of hard work heavy breathing.
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6
Q

“Bullets smacking the belly out of the air”

A
  • Personified bullets and semantic body parts with ‘belly’ and ‘smashed arm’ blurs the line between weapon and man by dehumanising the soldier and personifying the weapons.
  • Violent imagery and onomatopoeia.
  • Describes the sound and impact of the shots.
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7
Q

“A rifle as numb as a smashed arm”

A
  • Simile
  • Suggests his weapon is useless and fore-shadows the injuries he is likely to get.
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8
Q

“In what cold clockwork of the stars and nations”

A
  • Clockwork - A metaphor for his actions as being more
    like a clockwork machine than human.
  • Trivialises war to a game of toy clockwork soldiers between nations.
  • Soldiers insignificance and lack of control.
  • “cold’ implies people in charge of the war don’t care about individual soldiers.
  • Alliteration of “c” emphasises the brutal impact on the soldiers caused by the institutions.
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9
Q

“His terror’s touchy dynamite.”

A
  • The use of dental alliteration shows the authority of the institutions which contrasts to the vulnerablility of the soldiers.
  • Soldiers seem to have become a weapon rather than a human being.
  • Purely driven by his terror.
  • Metaphor emphasises adrenaline rush and almost animal like reactions
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