'Death of a Naturalist' and 'The Early Purges' are both concerned with a child's change in attitude to animals or nature. Write about both of these poems commenting on how each deals with the idea.

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‘Death of a Naturalist’ and ‘The Early Purges’ are both concerned with a child’s change in attitude to animals or nature. Write about both of these poems commenting on how each deals with the idea.

Both ‘Death of a Naturalist’ and ‘The Early Purges’ are poems written by Seamus Heaney. Each begins by explaining a child’s enthusiasm for nature, and goes on to describe how this fascination is somehow changed. Both poems put across the idea that childhood is a time of innocence before the realities of life are properly understood.

        The poem ‘The Early Purges’ is set on a farm. It has a strong rhyme scheme where each stanza has three lines, the first rhyming with third every time. The first line is “I was six when I first saw kittens drown” so we know that the poet is looking back to events of his childhood. This is a powerful opening line- a short, blunt sentence that mentions seeing death at such a young age. This one line has already created a very negative mood for the poem. Heaney uses techniques such as an oxymoron when describing the sound of the kittens in a bucket, “a frail metal sound”. This shows the child’s confusion. Another example of an oxymoron which is used is when the bodies of the kittens are described as “glossy and dead”, showing that as a child, even though Heaney was distressed by the death of the kittens, he still found the sight appealing in some way. He uses the simile, “Like wet gloves” to describe the way the kittens “bobbed and shone” in the bucket of water. We also know that he is fascinated, because he hangs around the yard for days, “watching the three sogged remains”.

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        We immediately form a negative opinion of Dan Taggart as soon as he is mentioned. When drowning the kittens he calls them, “the scraggy wee shits” and this casual swearing makes him sound common and cruel. Not only does he brutally kill these creatures, but also he feels no guilt for his actions. We are told that he had, “pitched them…into a bucket”, and when they were dead he had, “sluiced them out on the dunghill”, showing us that his treatment of the kittens was extremely rough, that he treated them as objects which were a nuisance rather than living ...

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