The Emigree Flashcards

1
Q

Who wrote the emigree?

A

Carol Rumens

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2
Q

What is the opening line of the poem, which makes it sound like a story but also suggests loss?

A

“There once was a country…”

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3
Q

What quotation suggests that the memory is clear and happy?

A

“sunlight-clear”

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4
Q

What does “it seems” and “i am told” suggest?

A

Hints at another voice telling her about her past

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5
Q

What does “November” represent?

A

Difficult times, when things are cold, dark and gloomy

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6
Q

What metaphor suggests that the narrator’s memories are bright and positive but also solid and fixed?

A

“the bright, filled paperweight”

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7
Q

What quotation suggests that the country has been invaded and that the speaker’s positive view of it isn’t accurate?

A

“It may be at war, it may be sick with tyrants”

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8
Q

What does “i am branded by an impression of sunlight” mean?

A

The negative “branded is juxtaposed with the positive “impression of sunlight”. “Branded” also suggests a permanence to her view - it can’t change

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9
Q

What does “white” and “glow” suggest about the city?

A

That it is pure - heavenly

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10
Q

In what quotation is time personified as an enemy, which can’t affect the speaker’s memories?

A

“time rolls its tanks”

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11
Q

What does “child’s vocabulary” and “every coloured molecule” suggest?

A

It is a reference to the language of her childhood. The metaphor makes the language seem bright and precarious

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12
Q

What quotation uses gustatory imagery to increase the vividness of the experience?

A

“It tastes of sunlight”

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13
Q

What is the first line of the last stanza which sounds hopeless?

A

“I have no passport, there’s no way back at all”

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14
Q

In what quotation is the city personified to represent the speaker’s memories?

A

“but my city comes to me in its own white plane”

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15
Q

What quotation uses childlike joy?

A

“I comb its hair and love its shining eyes”

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16
Q

What do the quotations “city of walls” “they accuse me” suggest?

A

They’re contrasting perceptions of the city the speaker is now in. She see it as restrictive but “they” se it as “free”

17
Q

What does the quotation “they accuse me” suggest?

A

It is unclear who “they” are but they’re menacing and the repetition reinforces their threat to the speaker

18
Q

What does “dark” imply?

A

The speaker is accused of being “dark” in her current city but this contrasts with the brightness she associates with her old city

19
Q

What is the effect of the final line “evidence of sunlight”?

A

The poem ends on a positive note, despite the threats of death, the city is still associated with “sunlight” just as it is at the end of the first two stanzas

20
Q

What is the context of the poem?

A

The poem is based on modern examples of emigration, where people have to flee their homes because of war, corruption, tyranny or dictatorship

21
Q

What is the form of the poem?

A

The poem is written in the first person, with 3 eight-line stanzas but no regular rhythm or rhyme scheme. Lots of enjambment in the first 2 stanzas but lots of end-stopping in the 3rd stanza, reflecting the speakers feeling of confinement in hew new “city of walls”

22
Q

What are the tone/mood of the poem?

A

Nostalgia and threat