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Summary Grade 9 Essay Plans for Power and Conflict Poetry

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Are you a GCSE English Lit student looking for comprehensive notes and essays on Power and Conflict Poetry? This package gives you access to multiple and detailed essay plans for each text including each text's form, language, and structure for the key seven poems in the Power and Conflict Anthology. Whether you're struggling to understand the texts or looking for inspiration for your own essays, our Grade 9 English package has you covered.

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Compare the ways poets present ideas about power in ‘The Prelude’ and in one other poem
from ‘Power and Conflict’.

Form:
1. Epic poem - used to tell tales of intense adventures + heroic feats - nature is
personified as heroic + it tells the story of Wordsworth’s early life

Opening:
1. “One summer evening (led by her) I found, A little boat tied to a willow tree”
- stealing is a natural act - nature has been personified as ‘her’
- enjambement - overwhelming impact of nature - he’s in awe - blurts out his
thoughts in an unordered way
2. “I unloosed her chain”
- has been summoned by nature - now has intense desires - allowing himself to
have sexual fantasies + liberation
3. “It was an act of stealth”
- man is shown to be selfish - takes what he wants from nature - without asking
- pride of man - feels dominant
- knows what he’s doing is wrong - but it has been approved by nature

Structure:


1. Blank verse - no rhyme scheme - but use of iambic pentameter - due to
Milton’s influence - disregards the stanza form -
- Milton’s influence in making philosophical poems written in blank
verse - uses the poem to show nature’s power
2. One long verse - reader is overwhelmed by the poem - in the same way that
young Wordsworth is during his experience with nature
3. volta - “when” - revelation of subject + verbs - delayed by Wordsworth
increases tension + suspense - readers can empathise with the poet’s feelings at
the time

,Language:

1. “And lead us not into temptation”
- nature is deliberately tempting him - exploiting his youth
- alludes to the Lord’s Prayer
- Eve seduces Adam - tricking + fooling him

2. “like a swan”
- simile - symbolic of innocence + purity - mocked because he commits an “act of
stealth”
- ruins something innocent - gives himself the false idea of being innocent
- can enjoy sexual pleasure + reconnect with his true love - nature

3. “silent water stole my way”
- sibilance - shows sinisterly of nature - is a thief
- stole pleasure + fulfilling aspect of sex - now he’s haunted by guilt - has done
nothing wrong - is only now recovering
- juxtaposes with the idea of innocence

Ending:

1. “trouble to my dreams”
- wonders if he’ll ever be able to survive these dreams + the guilt he’s experiencing
2. “darkness… no pleasant images”
- his virginity had been taken from him by nature - had been robbed of sexual
pleasure + good sexual experiences - has scared him for life
3. “like living men”
- he’s confused about it - has nobody to confide in - toxic masculinity
- has to keep this a secret - due to the societal pressures that exist for men

, Compare the ways poets present ideas about power in ‘Storm on the Island’ and in one other
poem from ‘Power and Conflict’.

Form:
1. Dramatic monologue - the other side cannot tell their story - imbalance in the
relationship between speaker + nature - only one dominant voice
- nature’s lack of voice shows how indifferent nature is to what’s
happening + doesn’t care about impact on speaker

Opening:

1. “We are prepared: we build our houses squat”
- “we” - first person plural - collective sense of unity + strength in unity + the
sense of solidarity in the face of Catholic opposition

2. “Sink walls in rock”
- buildings are a metaphor for people - suggests they may be stuck - they cannot
escape where they live
- political message: can’t escape conflict between Catholics + Protestants

3. “This wizened earth”
- includes the word ‘wise’ - suggests something is wrong with the wisdom - the
country is also like this - not a healthy place to live
- could also suggest the earth is completely shrivelled up

Structure:
1. one long stanza - no stanza breaks - reflects the lack of breathing space -
reflects the overwhelming situation the speaker finds themselves in - how
dangerous the storm actually is
2. enjambment - creates constant barrage of information - reflects the relentless
barrage of the storm on the house
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