harmonium - created from Mind Map

Description

Note on harmonium - created from Mind Map, created by zoevardi on 23/12/2013.
zoevardi
Note by zoevardi, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
zoevardi
Created by zoevardi over 10 years ago
zoevardi
Copied to Note by zoevardi over 10 years ago
158
0

Resource summary

Page 1

StructureThe poem has four stanzas of varying lengths. The first stanza describes the harmonium as it stands, ready to be discarded. The next is a closer investigation of the instrument, with detailed descriptions of its parts. The third stanza considers the history of the instrument. The final stanza, which describes carrying the harmonium from the church, is concerned with the relationship between the speaker and his father.

comparison Nettles is a poem about the relationship between father and son, although from the perspective of the father rather than the son Praise Song for My Mother Praise Song for My Mother is about a parent from a child's perspective, although it is more direct than Harmonium.

language Colloquial language is used to create an informal, friendly and conversational tone. In the first stanza the harmonium is "gathering dust", about to be "bundled off to the skip" or sold "for a song" (cheaply). This technique creates a sense of honesty and deceptive simplicity. The colloquial language is also combined with puns associated with music. As well as the example above, the sound of the harmonium "still struck a chord" - both literally as the instrument still plays, but also because it triggers thoughts of the past, specifically of fathers and sons singing in the church choir. Imagery The third stanza uses an interesting metaphor to describe the choir. The singers "opened their throats/and gilded finches - like high notes - had streamed out". The metaphor of the voices sounding like golden birds is combined with a simile of the "high notes" to create a very positive and joyful image of the past. The harmonium is given human qualities throughout the poem: the keys are "fingernails"; "one of its notes has lost its tongue"; and it is carried out "laid on its back". The position of the instrument in the church, like an important member of the congregation or community, was once significant.

harmonium

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

Memory - AQA Psychology Unit 1 GCSE - created from Mind Map
joshua6729
Themes in Pride and Prejudice
laura_botia
Themes in Lord of the Flies
lowri_luxton
IELTS Speaking vocabulary
Rafael Pôssas
LADY MACBETH TRAITS
Zealous
Maths GCSE - What to revise!
livvy_hurrell
GCSE Maths Symbols, Equations & Formulae
livvy_hurrell
Science Flash Cards
Em Roberts
ALL module 5 vocab
Pamela Dentler
Comparative Studies 2016: The Plough and The Stars, Foster, The King's Speech
Lorenzo Battilocchi
How to Study Smart
Abdou Mohamed