Question 1 Skills: Analysing a Poem (Edexcel IGCSE English Language A)
Revision Note
Written by: Deb Orrock
Reviewed by: Kate Lee
Question 1 Skills: Analysing a Poem
Question 1 will be based on one of the fiction texts in your Edexcel anthology. The anthology consists of ten texts, of which the following are poems:
‘Disabled’ by Wilfred Owen
‘Out, Out—’ by Robert Frost
‘An Unknown Girl’ by Moniza Alvi
‘The Bright Lights of Sarajevo’ by Tony Harrison
‘Still I Rise’ by Maya Angelou
It’s important to prepare for this question in the exam by studying the ten texts in advance. The following guide is designed to help you in your study of poetry. It includes:
Overview
Form
Structure
Language
Meanings and ideas
Perspective and tense
Quoting from a poem
Overview
Poetry presents its readers images that are not always realistic, and which need to be interpreted. It is important to remember that the choices a writer has made in terms of how the poem is set out and the language they have used are all deliberate — a poem is a crafted piece of work. It is therefore useful to consider not only the language choices a writer has made, but also what decisions they have taken in terms of structure and form.
What to do when analysing a poet’s methods
Take a whole-text approach to the poem:
This could involve commenting on structure: “at the start”/“this changes when”/“in contrast…”
This could involve commenting on a poet’s choice of form:
How have they conformed to, or subverted, the form of sonnet/dramatic monologue etc.?
What deliberate choices has the poet made with their verse form? Are there reasons there is a regular or irregular rhyme structure?
Think about how tone is presented and develops: why has the poet chosen to present this tone? Why have they included a tonal shift?
Are characters in the poem presented differently from each other? Why? What does each represent?
Do characters’ relationships with each other change? Why might a poet have chosen to do this?
Remember that personas, and characters in a poem, are constructs, not real people:
Think about what each character’s function is in the poem
What does the poet use their persona, or characters, to say about the theme?
Why has the poet chosen to write their poem in first, or third, person?
Is the first-person narrator reliable or unreliable?
Always frame your essay with the poet in mind:
As the examiners say: “writers use methods, including language and structure, to form and express their ideas — the choices the writer makes are conscious and deliberate”
Therefore, write that a poet “highlights X”, “suggests Y”, “challenges Z”
And always use the poet’s (last) name in your essay
Use the words “so” and “because” to push you to explain your own ideas further
Zoom out to big ideas in your analysis:
Go from analysing language, or other writer’s choices, to a poet’s overall intention or message
This should also link to your thesis, and argument, throughout
You can begin these “zoom out” sentences with “The poet could be suggesting that because X, then Y” or “The poet could be using the character of X to challenge contemporary ideas about Y”
Use modal language to present sophisticated ideas:
Using words like “could”, “may” or “perhaps” shows that you are thinking conceptually
Form
The form of the poem can be thought of as “genre”. Poetry itself is a form of text, as are prose and drama. Within the form of poetry, there are many sub-forms. It’s important that you know what genre your anthology poems are in, as you can gain valuable marks for commenting on a text’s form.
When writing about form in poetry, it is important to consider why the poet has chosen that particular form, especially if they have altered the rules of that particular form. It is also useful to consider how the form reflects the themes of the poem.
Let’s take a look at an example. The following poem is called ‘Ozymandias’ by Percy Bysshe Shelley:
‘Ozymandias’ | Analysis of form |
---|---|
I met a traveller from an antique land Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand, Half sunk, a shatter’d visage lies, whose frown And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Which yet survive, stamp’d on these lifeless things, The hand that mock’d them and the heart that fed; And on the pedestal these words appear: “My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Nothing beside remains. Round the decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretch far away. | The form of this poem is a sonnet, made up of 14 lines |
However, Shelley blends elements of the Petrarchan and Shakespearean sonnets | |
It is Petrarchan in that the poem is structured as an octave and a sestet, but Shelley alters the rhyme scheme | |
This could reflect the idea that the fleeting nature of human power is overwhelmed by the power of nature | |
Shelley breaks away from the traditional sonnet form to imply that power doesn’t last and can be broken |
How to apply this in an exam response:
Exam question | Incorporating analysis of form in your response |
---|---|
Explore how Shelley conveys ideas of power in “Ozymandias” | Shelley conveys ideas of power in ‘Ozymandias’ by taking the traditional form of a sonnet and subverting it. He blends Petrarchan and Shakespearean sonnet forms, and alters the rhyme scheme. This reflects the fleeting nature of human power when compared to the overwhelming power of nature, and implies that power does not last and can be broken down and re-arranged. |
Structure
The structure of a poem refers to how the poem has been put together in its particular form. The choices a poet can make in terms of how to structure their poem includes stanza length, the use of repetition and refrains, a circular structure, and the use of particular types of punctuation, such as caesura, or a lack of punctuation at the end of a line, called enjambment. Structure also includes rhyme scheme and changes in line length. The poet’s choices regarding structure can affect a poem’s meaning or message.
Let’s look at an example of structural choices made by a writer and how these shape meaning. The following stanzas are taken from John Agard’s poem ‘Checking Out Me History’:
‘Checking Out Me History’ | Analysis of structure |
---|---|
Dem tell me bout 1066 and all dat dem tell me bout Dick Whittington and he cat But Toussaint L’Ouverture no dem never tell me bout dat Toussaint a slave with vision lick back Napoleon battalion and first Black Republic born Toussaint de thorn to de French Toussaint de beacon of de Haitian Revolution | Agard deliberately structures the stanzas into two distinct styles through the use of italics to emphasise the separation between the history he was taught at school and Black history |
The poet also juxtaposes sometimes frivolous British and white history taught in colonial schools with powerful Black history | |
The stanzas dealing with the history the speaker was forced to learn use simple rhyming couplets | |
This emphasises the superficial nature and lack of relevance of this history to the speaker | |
Each of these stanzas also start with “Dem tell me” — the repetition suggesting a frustration with the colonial control that has dominated the speaker’s life, and which now dominates these stanzas of the poem | |
The stanzas in italics are longer and use an unconventional structure, to suggest these are unconventional ideas | |
The lines in these stanzas are shorter and written in free verse to sound more like speech and in contrast with the nursery-rhyme rhythm of the “white history” stanzas |
How to apply this in an exam response:
Exam question | Incorporating analysis of structure in your response |
---|---|
How does Agard strikingly convey the differences in personal experiences of history in “Checking Out Me History”? | Agard structures his poem to show a clear distinction between the white, colonial history he was taught at school, and the history that is more important to him that he was not taught. He does this by deliberately changing the font of the poem between the stanzas. In addition, the stanzas containing “white” history are structured using simple rhyming couplets, giving them a nursery-rhyme and simplistic quality, while the stanzas written in italics and dealing with his history are written in free verse and are longer, suggesting they deal with more complex and unconventional ideas. |
Language
When analysing language in a poem, you need to consider the specific choices of words and phrases the writer has used, as well as the imagery they have created and the language techniques they have used, all of which contribute to the themes and meanings in the poem.
In order to do this, you should consider both the denotation and the connotations of particular words:
Denotation = the literal meaning of a word or phrase
Connotation = the associations or implied meanings of the word or phrase
When commenting on words and phrases from the text, you should always try to consider why you think the writer has chosen that particular word to use. Below are some questions that you might ask yourself when analysing the words and phrases in a poem:
Denotations and connotations | Emotional impact | Charactеrisation | Formality and informality |
---|---|---|---|
How do these layеrs of mеaning add dеpth to thе poem? | How do the words evoke еmotions or fееlings in thе rеаdеr? Do thеy crеatе joy, sadnеss, fеar or еxcitеmеnt? | Do the words rеvеal aspеcts of the narrator's pеrsonality, background or еmotions? | Do the words make the text morе rеlatablе or distant? |
Once you are able to identify particular words and phrases within a text, you need to develop this skill further by considering why the writer has chosen to include these within their writing.
Rеmеmbеr thе goal of analysing words and phrasеs is to uncovеr layеrs of mеaning, to understand thе writer’s intent and to explore how languagе contributes to the ovеrall impact of thе poem.
Knowing the names of sophisticated language techniques will not gain you any more marks in the exam, especially if these techniques are only “spotted” and the writer’s intentions are not explained. Once you are able to identify and understand different literary techniques (see our Literary Devices Glossary for more details), you need to develop this skill further by considering why the writer has chosen to include these techniques in their writing.
How to apply this in an exam response:
Exam question | Incorporating analysis of language in your response |
---|---|
How does Hughes create such a compelling portrait of the hawk in ‘Hawk Roosting’? | The poem begins with the hawk as the narrator, personifying it with the human quality of dreams, as it describes dreaming “about killing my prey perfectly and eating them”. Hughes gives the hawk the powers of conscious thought, but juxtaposes this with the lack of human qualities such as mercy and remorse. This leads to a contradiction that runs throughout the poem: the hawk’s natural instinct is the non-human one to kill, yet it can only express this nature through human language |
Examiner Tips and Tricks
It is more important to explore the effects of the writer’s choices than it is to use over-complicated terminology. You can be just as successful in writing about the effect of a specific word choice as you are in writing about complex language features.
Meanings and ideas
A sensitive and personal response to a poem comes from reading the poem closely and knowing the poem thoroughly: what it means and what the poet is trying to say. You should think critically about meanings and interpretations, and use quotations and references to support your response.
When you consider your response to a poem, it is essential that you provide evidence to support your interpretation. This will make your response well-informed. However, it’s important that your analysis isn’t led by the evidence.
You should therefore begin your analysis of the given poem with an exploration of the poet’s meaning and ideas, rather than the methods they have used. This will automatically mean that you are developing a personal response to the poem, rather than just “spotting” the techniques a poet has used. It is also a good idea to consider how the poem’s title helps you understand its content. Then, depending on the focus of the question, find the evidence that supports your understanding and interpretation of the poem.
Ideas and themes, not methods
Examiners warn against structuring your analysis based on the poet’s methods:
They do not reward well when students identify a poet’s method first, and then analyse what it means
For example, spotting that a poem includes sibilance, or caesura, and then attempting to say something relevant about that method
Often, this won’t work because students will fail to identify a convincing link between the method and the theme of the question
Instead, examiners suggest students focus their responses on meaning and ideas, and use the poet’s methods as a means of illustrating meaning:
So your argument should start with the poet’s overarching ideas in terms of the question, and then find evidence from the poem that illustrates these ideas
For example, if the question is about how the poet conveys ideas about marriage, you would not start a point like this:
“The poet uses caesura in line 13. This caesura could show how…”❌
But instead, like this:
“The poet presents marriage as something challenging, which requires mutual respect. The poet shows this when…”✅
Tone
Another way to understand the meaning and ideas of a poem is to consider its tone.
In poetry, tone is the “mood” of a poem:
This could be the mood that:
A speaker expresses in a poem
A poet has towards their speaker
The poet creates in terms of the setting of the poem
The poet creates in terms of the poem’s subject matter
The tone of a poem reflects its ideas and meaning:
It is therefore something you should consider when thinking about how a poet expresses their ideas and meaning
Because a poem’s mood is created by the poet’s language, pace and rhythm, symbolism and grammar, it works perfectly as evidence in your essay:
So think: what is the tone the poet is trying to convey in their poem?
And how — via their choices — do they create this effect?
Another sophisticated way to explore ideas and meanings presented by a poet is to consider whether the tone of a poem changes:
Think: why has the poet created this tonal shift?
And how — via their poetic choices — do they create this shift?
This also enables you to say something relevant about structure
So think first about why a poet has created a certain tone, and what its effect is, before thinking about what methods they have used to create it:
For example, you would not start a point like this:
“The poet uses imagery in line 1. This creates a tone of …”❌
But instead:
“Macrae explores ideas about being contented within your own self through her use of metaphor, “while inside his heart was fat with sun”, which suggests Harry’s life is one that is filled to the brim with joy and pleasure, which…”✅
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You do not get more marks for addressing language, structure and form separately. In fact, if your analysis is irrelevant to the question you have been set, you could lose marks. Always begin with the question, and make sure everything you consider in the poem relates back to the focus of the question.
Perspective and tense
Considering perspective is another sophisticated way to explore a poet’s intention and messages:
Perspective in poetry is the point of view from which the poem is being told:
It could be narrated in the first person (using the pronoun “I”)
It could be narrated in the third person (“he”; “she”; “they”, etc.)
Poems often also contain a persona:
A persona, or speaker, is the invented character through which the poem is narrated
Remember, the persona of a poem is not the same as the poet themselves, and this separation allows poets to explore ideas with more nuance and subtlety
Poets often create a fictional narrator (a persona) when writing in the first person
Sometimes, writing in the first person can give a poem more immediacy
Perspective is therefore a very deliberate choice made by the poet in order to better get across their ideas and message:
As such, it counts as a writer’s method
Just like tone above, it is directly linked to a writer’s intention, and so serves as excellent evidence for a poet’s meaning and ideas
Considering the tense of the poem also contributes to the speaker’s perspective
Different tenses will create a different tone and perspective, and the poet will have made a deliberate choice over which tense they are using and why:
For example, is the speaker looking back (past tense), speaking about now (present tense) or looking forward (future tense)?
How to quote from the poem in your essay
The ability to support your interpretation means selecting relevant quotations from the poem
However, it is the skill of precisely unpicking and selecting textual references, rather than using quotations, that’s important
Therefore, references don’t always need to be direct quotations:
They can be references to things that happen in the poem
They can be references to the choices and methods the poet uses (“this idea is expressed when the poet uses first-person narration/a tonal shift/symbolism relating to X in order to…”)
Examiners repeatedly stress that textual references are just as valuable as direct quotations:
The most important thing is that these references are directly related to the ideas and themes you are exploring in your essay, and provide evidence to prove your thesis
When using direct quotations, you should aim to select 6–7 relevant quotations that contain a range of language and/or structure devices that you can comment upon and analyse:
A high-level response will incorporate these quotations into the explanations of meaning
Your quotations should also be embedded into your sentences, rather than separate. For example:
“The poet explores how power does not last by stating that ‘Nothing beside remains’, which tells us that there is nothing left of this once-powerful ruler except a broken statue standing in the middle of a vast desert” ✅
Rather than:
“The poet explores how power does not last. This is shown in the quote ‘Nothing beside remains’. This shows…” ❌
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