Title:
1How are soldiers lives presented in a selection
of war poems
2Poetic terminology
- Enjambment When a line runs on into the next
one - Simile Comparing two things using like or as
- Metaphor Comparing things by saying one IS
another - Alliteration Repeating the same letter
- Assonance Repeating the same vowel sound
- Onomatopoeia When words sound like the thing they
are describing - Repetition Repeating the same word/phrase/idea
- Allusion Referring to another literary
work/writer - Imagery Pictures that certain words create in our
minds - Rhythm A regular beat
- Rhyme Words having a similar sound
- Caesura A pause in a line of poetry, often
indicated by a punctuation mark - Ellipsis When part of a line is missing
(sometimes indicated by three dots) - Personification When something is given human
characteristics - Stanza A verse of poetry
3Band 3 7-9 Band 2 4-6
4Band 5 13-15 Band 4 10-12
5Considering the writers purpose(s)
Thinking about structure as well as language
Using PEE. Using phrases like this shows, this
suggests and this implies to explain your
points and evidence
Skills
Using poetic terminology like simile, metaphor,
personification, enjambment, rhyme
Considering context
Evaluating effects on the readers by using
phrases like this is effective because and
this is important because
6The Falling Leaves
7The Falling Leaves Context
- World War One (191418) is sometimes called the
Great War great here meaning immense or
huge, because it was unlike previous wars.
Firstly, it involved everyone, not just the army
and navy. Secondly, and probably most
devastatingly, it involved the first modern
weapons (machine guns, bombs and gas) at a time
when soldiers were still involved in hand-to-hand
combat. The horror of the trenches is hard for us
to grasp fully. However, many of the young
soldiers who had signed up believing they were on
an heroic mission to defend their families,
country and way of life felt betrayed by those
who had persuaded them to enlist. The reality of
war was shown in their poetry and later for
those who survived in their novels. - Battle of The Somme
- Battle of the Bulge WW2
8The Falling Leaves November 1915
Today, as I rode by, A I saw the brown leaves
dropping from their tree B In a still afternoon,
C When no wind whirled them whistling to the sky,
A But thickly, silently, B They fell, like
snowflakes wiping out the noon C And wandered
slowly thence D For thinking of a gallant
multitude E Which now all withering lay, F Slain
by no wind of age or pestilence, D But in their
beauty strewed E Like snowflakes falling on the
Flemish clay. F MARGARET POSTGATE COLE
9The Falling Leaves November 1915
Today, as I rode by, spectator speaking I saw
the brown leaves dropping from their tree In a
still afternoon, quiet, still, peaceful,
Autumnal When no wind whirled them whistling to
the sky, alliteration. Not windy But thickly,
silently, They fell, like snowflakes wiping out
the noon simile slow. Loads of leaves And
wandered slowly thence spectator is not walking
slowly. Taking it in For thinking of a gallant
multitude thinks about brave group of
soldiers Which now all withering lay, soldiers
dead and dying on the ground Slain by no wind of
age or pestilence, soldiers NOT dead through
natural causes But in their beauty strewed cut
down in their prime. Bodies scattered Like
snowflakes falling on the Flemish clay. Lots of
soldiers falling. Belgium- loads of battles in
WW1 MARGARET POSTGATE COLE
10Questions
- How does Cole use the extended metaphor of
falling leaves? - What do the verbs strewed and withering show
us about the battlefields? - Why does Cole use the simile like snowflakes
falling to describe the fallen soldiers? - What does her description of the gallant
multitude show about her feelings towards the
soldiers? - What words/phrases show that the soldiers died
too young?
11The Charge of the Light Brigade
12The Charge of the Light Brigade Context
- First published in 1855, the poem tells the story
of the failed charge of the British cavalry in
the Battle of Balaclava in October 1854. - Britain was fighting with France, Sardinia and
the Ottoman Empire against Russian forces in the
Crimean War, which was about control of the
Dardanelles, a narrow sea straight in Turkey. If
the Russians had power over the Dardanelles,
British sea routes (and trade) would have been
threatened. - Although it is unclear who was actually
responsible, a cavalry group, the Light Brigade
(led disastrously by Lord Cardigan who
miraculously survived), was ordered to attack a
very strongly defended Russian position. - The 670 men were sent to fight 5500 Russians and
only 195 men and horses managed to return
13- About the charge
- BBC NEWS Magazine Why the Charge of the Light
Brigade still matters - THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE- In Color -
YouTube
14Questions on the Poem
- Choose 3 interesting verbs Tennyson has used. How
do they help to create atmosphere in the poem - What is the effect of the alliteration in line
44? Where else is alliteration used in the poem?
What effect does it have? - How does the poet use the personifying metaphors
mouth of hell and jaws of death? - What must this experience have been like for the
soldiers? Use your own ideas and include quotes
to support your points.
15Bayonet Charge
Tuesday 4th March
The lads neck nominations had got out of hand
16(No Transcript)
17- Over the top
- BBC - History - World Wars The Last Tommy
Gallery - world-war-1-beginning.pdf
18(No Transcript)
19Definitions
confusion
Chunk of soil
- Threshing
- Furrows
- Clod
- Bewilderment
- Bayonet
- Statuary
- patriotic
Lines/ mini trenches in the soil
Love for your country
Separate grains from stalks
statues
A sharp blade attached to the end of a rifle
20The soldiers feelings
1) lugged and numb
1) exhaustion
2) bewilderment
2) confusion
3) shock
3) he almost stopped
4) disillusioned/betrayed
4) etcetera
5) helpless
5) to get out of that blue crackling air
21Charge of the light brigade
Bayonet Charge
Falling Leaves
22Possible Points
Falling Leaves Bayonet Charge Charge of the Light Brigade
Wasted lives Traumatic Cannon fodder
Dying too young Lives are wasted Victims of poor decisions
Anonymous, huge numbers died Unprepared for what they had to face Bravery and heroism
Questioning the reasons behind war Outnumbered yet courageous
23Poets Purpose
- You must offer ideas about the poets purpose
(why they have included words, phrases, ideas
etc). Try to offer inventive, original
interpretations and consider alternative points
of view
Use repetition of cannon to left of them..
cannon..
24Developing Interpretations
- This suggests. This may also suggest
- This showsHowever, it may also imply
- One interpretation is.Alternatively
- This revealsalsofurthermore.additionallymoreov
er
25For each of these, consider at least two
interpretations of the poets purpose
- C/B grade
- Using powerful metaphors such as valley of
death and mouth of hell in Charge of the Light
Brigade - Using the simile like snowflakes in Falling
Leaves - The use of the adverb suddenly as the opening
of Bayonet Charge - A grade
- Enjambment in Bayonet Charge
- Caesura in Bayonet Charge
- Repetition in Charge of the Light Brigade
- In Falling Leaves there is a two part structure
ABCABC DEFDEF
26- 1) Point Caesura in Bayonet Charge
- Caesura pause in a line (often with punctuation)
- statuary in mid-stride. Then the shot-slashed
furrows - Poet may be showing that the soldier has come to
an absolute stop. The flow of the poem is halted,
just like the soldiers running. Alternatively
the poet may be trying to convey the soldiers
fear- he is unable to move until he is snapped
out of it.
27Answering the question (6-8 PEE points)
Poem 1 PEE 1
Poem 1 PEE 2
Try to make a link between poem 1 and poem 2
Poem 1 PEE 3
Poem 2 PEE 1
Try to make a link between poem 3 and poem 1
and/or 2
Poem 2 PEE 2
Poem 3 PEE 1
28Using PEE
- Point- (make a point) In Charge of the Light
Brigade the poet presents soldiers lives as
being wasted by the people in charge of them. - Evidence- (find a quote or evidence to back it
up) In stanza 2, we hear that someone has
blunderd and this is followed by the repetition
of Theirs not to. - Explain- (Explain 1) why your evidence proves
your point, 2) why the writer may have done this,
3) the effect on us as readers) 4) link to
context
29D PEE
- In Falling Leaves the soldiers lives are cut
short. For example it says falling leaves. This
shows that the soldiers lives are a bit like
leaves falling down to the ground/battlefield. - HOW COULD YOU MOVE THIS TO C GRADE PEE?
30D PEE
- In Bayonet Charge the soldiers lives are shown
to be unprepared. I know this because of the
quote suddenly. This quote shows that things
happened very quickly for the soldier and so him
and other soldiers probably werent prepared for
fighting. - HOW COULD YOU MOVE THIS TO C GRADE PEE?
31D PEE
- In Charge of the Light Brigade the soldiers
lives are presented as being scary. They are
riding into a valley of death which must have
pretty bad even if you were really brave. - HOW COULD YOU MOVE THIS TO C GRADE PEE?
32A PEE
- Blundered suggests an insignificant, silly
mistake but, in this war, such a blunder cost
hundreds of lives. You can sense the poets anger
that so little consideration was put into such an
important military decision because he contrasts
this by suggesting there wasnt a man afeard.
By contrasting the heroism of the soldiers with
the anonymous he who gave the orders, the poet
is presenting the soldiers in a far more
respectful way. This is then followed by the
repetition of Theirs not.. and Theirs but to
do and die which shows that soldiers had no
right to question the ludicrous orders they were
given. Through the repetition of theirs.. the
poet effectively reinforces the position soldiers
were put in during this conflict they had no
option but to carry out Cardigans orders despite
the fact it would result in almost certain death.
33Task Produce a plan for your CA. You will need
to include
- Terminology
- Line numbers/key quotes
- Some of the points you will make
- analytical/evaluative phrases
- Notes about context
- Notes about writers purpose(s)
P1 COTLB. Lives wasted. charge for.. PP show
disastrous decisions. Anger P2 COTLB. Lives
brave. hero, boldly was there a man afeard
PP amazing courage P3 COTLB. Lives were
uncertain. Enjambment, alliteration reflects fast
paced battle P3 COTLB. Life of soldier
dangerous. Metaphor mouth of hell ETCETC
Metaphor, stanza, simile, alliteration, rhythm,
enjambment, Narrator, caesura, rhyme ETC This
shows, this suggests, this conveys, the poets
purpose was, this is significant because.. ETC
ETC Crimean war, Lord Cardigan, 660 vs 5500,
ETC ETC
34Include
- A range of points about soldiers lives
- Accurate terminology
- Small, embedded quotations
- Explanation of your quotations (using analytical)
- InterpretationS of poets purpose
- Language (similes, emotive lang, metaphors)
- Structure (e.g repetition, enjambment, rhythm,
rhyme, stanzas, pace, caesura) - Form (poetic forms such as sonnets)
- Context
- Evaluation