Term 1
poetry
Form 2 2023
01
Revision
02
Fying Inside Your Own Body by Margaret Atwood
03
Try to Praise the Mutilated World By Adam Zagajewski
04
The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
01.
REVISION
PROVIDE THE
DEFINITION AND AN
EXAMPLE
Metaphor simile personification
alliteration assonance onomatopoeia
hyperbole juxtaposition oxymoron
imagery tone mood
2. MARGARET
ATWOOD
Margaret Eleanor Atwood, (born November 18, 1939,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada), is a Canadian writer best known
for her prose fiction and for her feminist perspective.
As an adolescent, Atwood divided her time between
Toronto, her family’s primary residence, and the sparsely
settled bush country in northern Canada, where her father,
an entomologist, conducted research. She began writing
at age five and resumed her efforts, more seriously, a
decade later.
After completing her university studies at Victoria College
at the University of Toronto, Atwood earned a master’s
degree in English literature from Radcliffe College,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1962.
Her works have been translated into over 30 languages
and she has been a full-time writer since 1972, first
teaching English, then holding a variety of academic posts
Within ‘Flying Inside Your Own
and writer residencies.
Body’ Atwood uses deeply
She is best known for her novels (The Handmaid's Tale
symbolic and metaphorical
etc.), in which she creates strong, often enigmatic, women
language to speak on themes of
characters and excels in telling open-ended stories, while
freedom, the self, escapism, and
dissecting contemporary urban life and sexual politics.
contemporary life. In her early poetry collections, Atwood ponders human
behaviour, celebrates the natural world, and condemns
The poem may have stemmed from
materialism. Role reversal and new beginnings are
a feeling of oppression for Atwood
recurrent themes in her novels, all of them centred on
at a point in her life due to an
women seeking their relationship to the world and the
experience that inspired her to
individuals around them.
write. It may be something as
Margaret Atwood is a Fellow of the Royal Society of
widespread and well-known as the
Canada, has been presented with the Order of Ontario and
oppression of women and the
the Norwegian Order of Literary Merit, and has been
feminist movement, or a situation
awarded 16 honorary degrees. She has lived in many
experienced by Atwood herself that
places including Canada, England, Scotland and France,
she simply did not want to specify.
and currently lives in Toronto.
The poem is general enough that it
can be applied to both, as well as
many other situations. It is not
dependant on the situation, but
rather just the feeling.
Flying Inside Your Own Body
by Margaret Atwood
Your lungs fill & spread themselves,
wings of pink blood, and your bones
empty themselves and become hollow.
When you breathe in you’ll lift like a balloon
and your heart is light too & huge,
beating with pure joy, pure helium.
The sun’s white winds blow through you,
there’s nothing above you,
you see the earth now as an oval jewel,
radiant & seablue with love.
It’s only in dreams you can do this.
Waking, your heart is a shaken fist,
a fine dust clogs the air you breathe in;
the sun’s a hot copper weight pressing straight
down on the think pink rind of your skull.
It’s always the moment just before gunshot.
You try & try to rise but you cannot.
3. ADAM
ZAGAJEWSKI
Adam Zagajewski was born in Lvov, Poland, in 1945; as an
infant he was relocated with his family to western Poland.
He lived in Berlin for a couple of years, moved to France in
1982, and taught at universities in the United States,
including the University of Houston and the University of
Chicago. Zagajewski wrote in Polish, but many of his
books of poetry and essays have been translated into
English. His prose collections include Two Cities: On Exile,
History and the Imagination (1995) and the 2000 memoir
Another Beauty. Zagajewski won the Prix de la Liberté as
well as fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation
and the Berliner Künstlerprogramm.
Zagajewski was considered one of the “Generation of ’68”
or “New Wave” writers in Poland; his early work was
protest poetry, though he moved away from that
emphasis in his later work. The reviewer Joachim T. Baer
noted in World Literature Today that Zagajewski’s themes
“are the night, dreams, history and time, infinity and
eternity, silence and death.” The titles of his poetry
'Try to Praise the Mutilated World
collections suggest some of these concerns: Tremor
was published in The New Yorker
(1985), Mysticism for Beginners (1997), Without End: New
just after the September 11 tragedy
and Selected Poems (2002), and Asymmetry (2018).
that occurred in NYC. The theme of
Zagajewski won many awards, including the 2004
the poem greatly resonated with
Neustadt International Prize for Literature, the 2010
the reader’s emotions and
European Poetry Prize, and the 2013 Zhongkun
experiences at that point in time. International Poetry Prize.
The poem focuses on the most
Writing of Zagajewski’s 1991 collection, Canvas, poet and
reviewer Robert Pinsky commented that the poems are
important ways that people can
“about the presence of the past in ordinary life: history
find happiness in their everyday
not as chronicle of the dead, or an anima to be
lives. They can step out into
illuminated by some doctrine, but as an immense,
nature or return to memories. sometimes subtle force inhering in what people see and
feel every day—and in the ways we see and feel.”
Nature and memories can be a
source of happiness during
Zagajewski died on March 21, 2021, in Krakow, Poland. He
troubling times, looking at past
was 75.
events and remembering the joy
associated with them. Although
things can, and will, go wrong, it is
important to always focus on
finding positives
Try to Praise the Mutilated World
By Adam Zagajewski
Translated by Clare Cavanagh
Try to praise the mutilated world.
Remember June's long days,
and wild strawberries, drops of rosé wine.
The nettles that methodically overgrow
the abandoned homesteads of exiles.
You must praise the mutilated world.
You watched the stylish yachts and ships;
one of them had a long trip ahead of it,
while salty oblivion awaited others.
You've seen the refugees going nowhere,
you've heard the executioners sing joyfully.
You should praise the mutilated world.
Remember the moments when we were together
in a white room and the curtain fluttered.
Return in thought to the concert where music flared.
You gathered acorns in the park in autumn
and leaves eddied over the earth's scars.
Praise the mutilated world
and the gray feather a thrush lost,
and the gentle light that strays and vanishes
and returns.
4. ROBERT
FROST
Born in 1874 in San Francisco, California. His father was a
newspaper editor (a profession Frost later practiced
himself, among others), and his mother was a teacher
and Scottish immigrant. When he was about ten years
old, his family moved to Massachusetts to be near his
grandfather, who owned a sawmill. Frost was named
both the valedictorian and the “class poet” of his high
school graduating class...and two years later published
his first poem, “My Butterfly: An Elegy,” in the New York
Independent magazine.
He attended both Dartmouth and Harvard, but dropped
out of both before graduating. His poetry wasn’t gaining
traction in the United States, either. To complicate
matters further, Frost and his wife, Elinor, suffered
personal tragedy when two of their six children died in
infancy.
In 1900, feeling frustrated by his job prospects and a lack
of traction in his poetry career, Frost moved his family to
a farm left to him by his grandfather in Derry, New
His 1916 poem, "The Road Not
Hampshire. Frost would live there for nine years, and
Taken," is often read at graduation
many of his most famous early poems were written
ceremonies across the United
before his morning chores while tending to the farm. But
States. Frost’s poetry was still largely overlooked by American
publishers. Consequently, Frost decided to sell the farm
The poem describes how the
in 1911 and moved his family to London. It was there he
speaker struggles to choose
published his first anthology of poetry, A Boy’s Will, in 1913.
between two roads diverging in
Frost’s second anthology, North of Boston, was published
the yellowish woods on an autumn
in 1914 and found massive success in England. Finally,
morning. after years of struggle, Frost became a famous poet
essentially overnight. In order to avoid WWI, Frost
Robert Frost wrote “The Road Not
returned to the U.S. in 1915 and began teaching at
Taken” as a joke for a friend, the
Amherst College and the University of Michigan, all the
poet Edward Thomas. When they
while continuing to write poetry. He received numerous
awards and recognitions, including the Pulitzer Prize for
went walking together, Thomas
poetry, and became the public face of 20th century
was chronically indecisive about
American poetry. Late in life, at 86 years old, Robert Frost
which road they ought to take and
also became the first inaugural poet at John F. Kennedy’s
—in retrospect—often lamented
inauguration in 1960.
that they should, in fact, have
Throughout his career, Frost never strayed far from old-
taken the other one. . fashioned, pastoral poetry, despite the fact that newer
American poets moved in a more experimental direction.
Frost’s poetry continued to focus on rural New England
life up until his death in 1963.
The Road Not Taken
By Robert Frost
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
1
What do you think this
poem is about?
QUESTIONS
Use evidence from the
Apply these questions
poem to support your
to each poem to help
answer. you gain a deeper
understanding
2 3
Identify, describe and
discuss the poetic
explain the key
elements found in the
characteristics of the
poem
poem
Setting, speaker, themes,
Look for things mentioned
tone/mood etc. on your "revision" page.
How do these things
relate to the poem and
add to the
meaning/message?
4
Comment on the form
and structure of the
poem
Stanzas, rhyme scheme,
punctuation, lines, layout
etc.
Remember: always try to
support your ideas and
statements with quotes
from the poem