Thomas Hardy

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Discuss a selection of poems by Thomas Hardy, and explain how they relate to his life and times.

In this essay I am going to be comparing poems by Thomas Hardy and writing about the rhythm, language, structure and rhyming scheme. I will also be commenting on Hardy’s life and past times, and explaining how they relate to his poetry.

“Plena Timoris” was the first poem by Hardy that we studied. “Plena Timoris” is a Latin name which means ‘Great fear’. The poem is about love and romance, and at the end gives a clear message that is, You can’t trust love, it never lasts.

From the first line of the poem, “The lovers looked over the parapet stone:” you can tell that ‘The lovers’ are going to be the main characters, and you can guess that something is going to happen to them. This quote also suggests that “The lovers” could be married.

The first verse is happy and is about love and the couple laughing together and enjoying themselves, then the mood changes and the couple slowly drift apart. This can also be shown in the life of Thomas Hardy, and how he and his wife drifted apart. Here are a few quotes from verse one of the poem, which suggest happiness and love. “Lovers”, “The moon”, “His arm around her”, “twinkled” and “laughed and leant”. Now here is a few more quotes but from verse two. These show the change in mood. “Splashing was heard”, “dripping body” and “snow”. Although “the moon” is mentioned in verse one, and is thought to be romantic, it is also seen as sad because the moon changes shape and never stays whole, so that also gives away a clue that the couple may drift apart.

The rhyming pattern is ABBAB it stays this way though out the whole poem with each verse having the same amount of lines and the same rhyming scheme. By having a regular rhyming scheme it creates a sense of harmony to begin with.

Hardy also uses a few technical terms such as an onomatopoeia, assonance and alliteration. Here is an example of an onomatopoeia that Hardy used in the second verse, “splashing” and “dripping” this emphasises the verse and makes it sound more real and life like. In verse one Hardy used an assonance, here is an example from the poem “directly blent”, and finally also in verse one is an alliteration, here is the example, “laughed and leant”. The effect of an alliteration and an assonance creates more rhythm and gives the poem more of a bounce.

“At Castle Boterel” was the second poem we studied. All the verses have the same amount of lines and have the same rhyming scheme, which is ABABB. By having a rhyming scheme it gives the poem more rhythm. Here is the first verse from the poem where you can see the rhyming scheme.

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“As I drive to the junction of the lane and highway,

And the drizzle bedredches the waggonette,

I look behind at the fading byway,

And see on its slope, now glistening wet,

Distinctly yet”

Verse four includes a rhetorical question “In that hill’s story”, by this Hardy is saying that people can come and go, but the country and landscape will stay here forever.

In this poem Hardy refers back to his past life and his wife, which he didn’t in “Plena Timoris”. In the first line of verse two Hardy writes “Myself and a girlish form”, I ...

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