2. SECTION A: POETRY
How to approach poetry questions:
• Know your poems: themes, tone, structure, imagery, diction, figures of speech,
context.
• Use the TACTICS method for analysis:
o Title — significance, irony, theme
o Audience — who is spoken to, perspective
o Content — what happens in the poem
o Tone — mood, attitude of poet/speaker
o Images — metaphors, similes, symbolism, sensory language
o Context — historical, social, cultural relevance
o Structure — stanza form, rhyme, rhythm, enjambment, punctuation
• Answer style: Write in full sentences, quote briefly (short phrases, not whole lines),
explain the effect.
Prescribed Poems Overview (Know all — exam will choose any!)
1. A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning (John Donne)
• Theme: Love as spiritual, transcending physical separation.
• Tone: Calm, reassuring, meditative.
• Imagery: Metaphysical conceits — compass metaphor (love as unbreakable circle),
death as peaceful parting.
• Key idea: True love endures distance and separation, unlike ordinary love.
2. The Collar (George Herbert)
• Theme: Struggle between rebellion and faith; anger at religious restrictions, ends in
submission.
• Tone: Starts frustrated, ends calm, submissive.
• Imagery: Collar = restraint, also “caller” (God calling).
• Structure: Chaotic rhyme/line length mirrors inner turmoil.
, 3. The Author of Her Book (Anne Bradstreet)
• Theme: Author’s insecurity about publishing; book as her child, flawed but beloved.
• Tone: Self-deprecating, maternal, humble.
• Imagery: Extended metaphor — book = child.
• Context: First published female poet in Puritan America.
4. In an Artist’s Studio (Christina Rossetti)
• Theme: Male gaze in art; woman objectified, reduced to an image.
• Tone: Critical, disapproving, mournful.
• Imagery: Repetition of “one face” = woman erased as individual.
• Key point: Critique of exploitation and gender roles in art.
5. The Darkling Thrush (Thomas Hardy)
• Theme: Despair and hope at the century’s turn; old era dying, fragile hope symbolized
by thrush.
• Tone: Gloomy, pessimistic → faintly hopeful.
• Imagery: Bleak winter landscape vs bird’s joyful song.
• Context: End of 19th century, doubt in religion/progress.
6. Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers (Adrienne Rich)
• Theme: Oppression of women in marriage vs female creativity/art as resistance.
• Tone: Sympathetic, critical of patriarchy.
• Imagery: Tigers = strength, freedom; Aunt = trapped, powerless.
• Context: Feminist poem, critique of gender roles.
7. A Far Cry from Africa (Derek Walcott)
• Theme: Conflict of identity (African vs European heritage); colonial violence in Kenya.
• Tone: Anguished, conflicted, bitter.
• Imagery: Vivid brutality (violence, blood); torn identity.
• Context: Mau Mau uprising; postcolonial struggle.
8. Childhood in Heidelberg (Andries Oliphant)
• Theme: Memory, nostalgia, childhood innocence in South Africa.
• Tone: Reflective, bittersweet.
• Imagery: Sensory details of landscape, small-town life.
• Context: SA setting; poem blends memory with place.