‘The Voice’ by Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) Love and death.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Song for Last Year’s Wife By Brian Patten LO: To evaluate how Patten uses language, viewpoint and comparison to convey a sense of loss.
Advertisements

TPCASTT Poetry Analysis Technique
Wedding Wind By Philip Larkin.
Act One – “And I Love Her” The Beatles
‘Pity me not because the light of day’ by Edna St. Vincent Millay
So, we’ll go no more a-roving By Lord Byron. Background Knowledge George Gordon Byron, (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824), commonly known as Lord Byron,
‘One Flesh’ Elizabeth Jennings
The Man He Killed Thomas Hardy. Background on Hardy Hardy lived from 1840 to He was the son of a mason, from Dorset, in the south west of England.
So We’ll Go No More A-Roving George Gordon, Lord Byron.
Thomas Hardy By: Brittany Frank and Daisy McGuigan masHardy.jpg.
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis 1/09 Poetry Unit: TP-CASTT - Blume 1 repetition! onomatopoeia!
 What do the footnotes tell us that help us to understand this poem?  Describe the structure of the poem. What “moves” do you see the poet making (i.e.
Rain Edward Thomas 1878 – 1917 Laura Botha Freddy Rouget.
“Aunt Julia” by Norman MacCaig.
Poetry Theme Project: Cruel Love
Selected Poetry of Norman MacCaig
Selected Poems of William Wordsworth By: Christine Yoon Shloka Joshi.
Thomas Hardy “Some blessed Hope, whereof he knew And I was unaware.”
Epitaph By: Katherine Philips
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Lines Written in the Spring. William Wordsworth William was born in Cumberland, England to be the son of John Wordsworth.
Copyright Jeanna Harnisch 2003 The Life and Poetry of Thomas Hardy Designed for UD junior poets interested in Thomas Hardy, or simply for those interested.
The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe
Conscientious Objector. What is a Conscientious Objector? This is a person who is strongly against war and fighting and who refuses to fight on the grounds.
“Valentine for Ernest Mann”
MIRROR ASIF ABBAS X ROLL NO. 19.
The Book Thief CONTINUED ! By Kaylinn Thomas 1. Featuring …  Introduction  Reflection  Recovery  What next  Move on  Where to now  New life  Legacy.
10th April 2012 LO: - Examine the Poem Pied Beauty!
I Heard a Fly Buzz – When I Died
Wednesday, March 23  Romantic Literature – Keats and Shelley  No homework.
THOMAS HARDY Biography.
THOMAS HARDY Biography Childhood Home  Hardy lived from 1840 to  He was born in this Dorset cottage in the south west of England. It was built.
Thomas Hardy By: Tiffani Ray. Introduction Thesis: Thomas Hardy was an important British writer and poet for the late 1800s and early 1900s. He changed.
The Widow’s Lament in Springtime
Thomas Hardy Nikki Fanelli. Background Born June 2 nd, 1840 in Dorchester, England Father was a mason Mother was a house wife.
William Wordsworth Honors English 4. Anticipatory Activity.
WARNING! beyond of understanding hope you have no hate for any earthling please do not read if you do not want food of thought the best Poem ever some.
17 th Century & Metaphysical Poetry Review. Presentation Requirements 1. Perform (overall judgment by Mr. Kirk – have the students captured the tone or.
Before Class 1. 王先生是一位 50 岁的老教师。 Mr. Wang is _________________________________. 2. 他出生在 1963 年 6 月份。 He _________________________________________. 3.
The Life of John Milton By : Olga Kaziyeva.
Beyond imagery The Voice. Does this sound like you? “ I usually do not appreciate the rhymes and metres of poetry. I do not pay much attention to them.
BY: Thomas Hardy.  Thomas Hardy, who was unusual in being both a great novelist and a great poet, was born in Dorset, a region of southwest England on.
Thomas Hardy( ) Life Works Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Death no longer separates us from God and one day death will no longer separate us from one another. Until His Second Coming, death is defeated, but not.
”The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost
Stanza Lines of fixed length, used in poetry to organize ideas. They act similarly to paragraphs. Language Arts rocks, this statement is true, When I’m.
NAME: Thomas Hardy OCCUPATION: Author, Poet BIRTH DATE: June 2, 1840 DEATH DATE: January 11, 1928 PLACE OF BIRTH: Stinsford, Dorchester, Dorset, England.
Poetry Analysis Essay. What does it mean to “analyze” a poem?  We are trying to figure out what the theme of the poem is… AND  How the poet uses literary.
First Love John Clare “Her face it bloomed like a sweet flower And stole my heart away complete…”
The ‘Emma’ poems Poem’s about Hardy’s slightly mad first wife: Emma.
Life In A Love By: Robert Browning BY: DORA ASHBY 1.
A Wife in London by Thomas Hardy.
Thomas Hardy By: Brittany Frank and Daisy McGuigan masHardy.jpg.
Thomas Hardy The Darkling Thrush Ah, Are You Digging on My Grave?
T P C A S T T POETRY ANALYSIS TITLE Evaluate the title of the poem before reading it. Are there any references or allusions in the title? Explain them.
Crossing the Bar By Lord Alfred Tennyson Page 824.
The Faithfulness of Jesus Obedience to God John 11:3-4 So the sisters sent word to Jesus, “Lord, the one you love is sick.” When he heard this,
 The Vietnam War was a cold war that started in 1959 and ended in  Around 4 million lives were lost because of it.  People from countries.
Poetry Analysis – Smile Method
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Thomas Hardy.
Memorial Norman Maccaig.
“Ah, Are You Digging on My Grave?”, by Thomas HArdy
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Poetry Anthology – Revision Session 3
Poetry Analysis – Smile Method
Isabella Walshe and Isabella Noto
Thomas hardy 2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928.
When You Are Old W.B. Yeats.
What memories do you associate with the place?
TP-CASTT Poetry Analysis
Presentation transcript:

‘The Voice’ by Thomas Hardy ( ) Love and death

Hardy lived from 1840 to He was the son of a mason, from Dorset, in the south west of England. He studied to be an architect, and worked in this profession for many years. Hardy eventually published many novels and include many which are established as masterpieces of English fiction: Far from the Madding Crowd, The Return of the Native, The Mayor of Casterbridge etc. Hardy no longer needed to write prose fiction for a living - the royalties from his existing work gave him sufficient income. He had always preferred poetry - and believed that he was better as a writer in this form. He wrote verse throughout his life, but did not publish a volume until Wessex Poems and Other Verses Thomas Hardy was married twice - his first marriage, long, childless and mostly unhappy, was to Emma Gifford. They married in Emma died in 1912, and in 1914 Hardy married his secretary, Florence Dugdale, Hardy died in 1928, aged 87. He had asked to be laid beside Emma, but his body was buried in Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey. Only his heart was placed in Emma's grave

Emma Gifford Hardy wrote several poems where he explores the guilt he feels for his neglect of Emma, his first wife, over the latter years of their marriage. He uses his writing to absolve himself of this guilt and come to terms with it.

1 st Stanza Woman much missed, how you call to me, call to me, Saying that now you are not as you were When you had changed from the one who was all to me, But as at first, when our day was fair.

1 st Stanza Hardy is the speaker and he imagines Emma calling out to him. “Woman much missed how you call to me, call to me” The first word is direct address of "Woman" followed by "much missed." The caesura after these three words separates them and poignantly tinges them with sadness and regret. The repetition of "Call to me" relays a pitiful plea, a painful sense of longing and highlights the strength of his love. “Saying that now you are not as you were when you had changed from the one who was all to me”- long lines,regretful tone. “But as at first, when our day was fair”. She tells him that she is not the woman she had become after forty years of marriage, but has regained the beauty of her youth, of the time when her and Hardy's “day was fair”. Hardy’s relationship with Emma Gifford was not a happy one. They had become estranged to one another.

2 nd Stanza Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then, Standing as when I drew near to the town Where you would wait for me: yes, as I knew you then, Even to the original air- blue gown!

2 nd Stanza “Can it be you that I hear? Let me view you, then”, - hints of doubt “Standing as when I drew near to the town Where you would wait for me; yes, as I knew you then, Even to the original air-blue gown!” Imagining he can indeed hear her, Hardy implores Emma to appear to him, in the place and wearing the same clothes that he associates with their early courtship. Remembrance of when they first met rather than when she died. Lively and optimistic tone.

3 rd Stanza Or is it only the breeze in its listlessness Travelling across the wet mead to me here, You being ever dissolved to wan wistlessness, Heard no more again far or near?

3 rd Stanza “Or is it only the breeze” – Doubts relating to the 1 st Line of the 2 nd Stanza....in its listlessness/Travelling across the wet mead to me here mead= (old word for ‘meadow’ “You being ever dissolved to wan wistlessness, Heard no more again for far and near?” Hardy introduces, in the third stanza, the mocking fear that all he hears is the wind and that Emma's death has marked the end of her existence - that she has been “dissolved” and will be “heard no more”. The whole stanza is one long question. The ‘Listlessness’ is embodied in the stanza itself The repetition of “no more again” in the stanza's final line emphasises his loneliness.

4 th Stanza Thus I; faltering forward, Leaves around me falling, Wind oozing thin through the thorn from norward, And the woman calling.

4 th Stanza This stanza is deliberately more ‘clipped’ and shorter than the others. The ‘thus I’ is also deliberately used to illustrate the poet’s loneliness. There is a less fluent rhythm, capturing the desolate mood of Hardy as he falters forward, while the leaves fall and the north wind blows, as Emma (if it is she) continues to call. The poem begins optimistically with a hope that Emma is really addressing Hardy. But by the end, a belief or fear that the “voice” is imaginary has replaced this hope.

Tone Haunting and melancholy. Utilises the supernatural to portray the tumultuous feelings of having loved and lost.

The Weather What is the weather like? How does it reflect the feelings of the poet? Use of onomatopoeia? How does sounding out the words ‘listlessness’ and ‘wistlessness’ show the effect of the weather on the poet’s state of mind? Any other language devices used?