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Summary Poems of the Decade The Lammas Hireling

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AQA A Level English Literature Poems of the Decade essay. I got 3 A*s at A-Level, 11A*/9/8 at GCSE, and I am currently studying History at the University of Cambridge. My A-Level notes really helped me to do well in my exams and I hope you will find them useful too! Each page of notes picks out the key quotations, and analyses them in depth looking at form, structure and language. The table format also helped me when making detailed comparisons which other poems. Please check my page for other useful notes! :)

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The Lammas Hireling
Rural life
● ‘Lammas’ - The title reflect rural life as ‘Lammas’ is the end of August, when people are hired to
help with the harvest
● ‘Heifers’, ‘fat as cream’ and ‘yields doubled’ - Fecund imagery shows positive start to poem.
Fertility could be compared to Chainsaw. Cream could have sexual connotations. Possible
reference to Of Mice and Men
● ‘Yields doubled’ - Two word sentence enacts how the yields are doubling
● ‘fox-trap biting his ankle’ - Image of rural life as being perhaps quite violent
● ‘my herd’s elf-shot’ - negative end to the poem, contrasting with the fecund imagery in the first
stanza
● ‘warlock’ and ‘Cow’ ‘with horns’ Reference to an Irish riddle meaning ‘hare

Religion

● ‘eyes rose like bread’ Christ imagery as Jesus’ body is bread. ‘rose’ has connotations of a
resurrection
● Duhig comes from Ireland, a very Catholic country. The end of the poem reflects this as it is
revealed that the narrator is speaking to a priest in confession
● Last two sentences of the poem are arguably paraprosdokian - it is surprising to find out that it is
taking place in a confession
● The narrator is presented as being dependent on religion for forgiveness; the imperative in
‘bless me’ shows his desperation.
● ‘sinned’ - ambiguous verb as we don’t know how he sinned. It could be bestiality,
homosexuality, murder
● ‘an hour since my last confession’ - A Lady Macbeth like obsession with religion and salvation.

Fantasy, Magic and Witchcraft

● The fantasy elements of the poem could present the narrator justifying why he killed the
hireling.
● It could also dehumanise the hireling because he is perhaps homosexual
● ‘yields doubled’ - the hireling may be presented as a quasi-magical figure in the first stanza as he
is shown to have a miraculous effect on the farm
● ‘pale form’ - ghostlike
● ‘fox trap biting his ankle’ - zoomorphism (attributing animal characteristics to a human). A
reference to DH Lawrence’s novella The Fox in which the male character on a farm is constantly
described using forx imagery.
● ‘warlock’ and ‘Cow’ ‘with horns’ - A ‘warlock’ is a male witch but a ‘cow’ is female. Shapeshifting
and blurring of the sexes, like in Chainsaw. Reference to an Irish riddle meaning ‘hare
● ‘To go into the hare gets you muckle sorrow’ - Reference to Isobel Gowdie, who ‘confessed’

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