Comparisons of 'The Wild Horses' and 'Pike' In these poems, the horses are portrayed as natural and a part of nature while the pike are unnatural and don't fit in with the rhythm of nature. Firstly, in 'The Wild Horses', Gilmore

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Samia Naifeh 11SV

Comparisons of 'The Wild Horses' and 'Pike'

In these poems, the horses are portrayed as natural and a part of nature while the pike are unnatural and don't fit in with the rhythm of nature. Firstly, in 'The Wild Horses', Gilmore portrays the horses as having a beat or a pace which mimics their heartbeat. This is evident in the rhyme scheme: AB AB CC DEED which is in each stanza. The polyrhythmic structure is like a heartbeat and the noun heartbeat suggests the need to live and the pace reflects the speed which is natural. However, the pike poem has no rhyme, ellipsis or enjambment which adds to the broken lines. This is illustrated in the poem when the author describes 'the jaws hooked clamp and fangs not to be changed at this date'. this reinforces the point that the poem has no beat like the heartbeat in 'The Wild Horses' which emphasizes the broken lines give and gives the poem unnaturalness. On the other hand, the horses are natural objects as they are compared to natural objects. This is indicated in the first stanza when the speaker says 'let the dark mountain shake to the thunder/ Where the wild horses trample the fern'. these two lines sound pray like as the imperative verbs and the use of alliteration give the poem an idyllic opening which is calm and pastoral. Whereas, the pike are compared to man made objects which have nothing natural about them. This is implied when the poet is describing the pike in 'three we kept behind the glass' and 'life subdued to it's instruments, submarine, as a vice locks the same iron in it's eye'. This is unnatural, as their association with man made objects makes them sound not only unnatural but artificial and a animal as a pike is very natural in a way as it belongs to nature.
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In these poems, the poets have portrayed the animals differently. Gilmore's wild horses are unified and work together as a team while Huges's pike are cannibalistic, eating their own kind. In 'The Wild Horses', the horses are portrayed as a group, working together almost like a homogenous entity. This is evident in the collective pronouns like 'they', 'their', 'them' and 'The Wild Horses'. this highlights the fact that there is constant reference to numerous horses, they are in group entity and she doesn't pick out individuals so she thinks they are all equal. However, the pike are portrayed ...

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