How do the writers of 'Hide and Seek' and 'Half-past Two' help you to understand the events or incidents they describe?

Authors Avatar

How do the writers of ‘Hide and Seek’ and ‘Half-past Two’ help you to understand the events or incidents they describe?

These two poems both tell the story of memorable incidents in the lives of children. ‘Hide and Seek’ describes the well known childhood game and ‘Half-past Two’ is a story about a school boy in detention who can’t tell the time. ‘Hide and Seek’ takes the form of a series of instructions on how to play the game interspersed with pieces of descriptive language whereas ‘Half-past Two’ is a narrative with some description.

In ‘Hide and Seek’ one participant in the game is telling another in the third person how to play. It begins ‘Call out. Call loud: “I’m ready! Come and find me!”’ and this is followed by instructions such as ‘Don’t breathe. Don’t move. Stay dumb’ and ‘Push off the sacks. Uncurl and stretch.’ The end of the game is rather inconclusive ‘The darkening garden watches. Nothing stirs. The bushes hold their breath; the sun is gone. Yes, here you are. But where are they who sought you?’

Join now!

 ‘Half-past Two’ is written in the second person from the perspective of an adult looking back at the childhood experience of another child. This is shown in the second verse where the narrator refers to ‘She’, presumably the teacher, and the ‘Something Very Wrong.’ Also this is shown in the use of the phrases, which refer to time such as ‘onceupona’ and ‘timefors’. The child’s world is contrasted with that of the adult through their contrasting understanding of time. The boy, who is the subject of the poem, has a very limited understanding of the concept of time. He ...

This is a preview of the whole essay