Introducing Seamus Heaney Date Seamus Heaney A Call

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Introducing Seamus Heaney Date:

Introducing Seamus Heaney Date:

Seamus Heaney: A Call 2. Date: Objectives: 1. Introduce and annotate the poem Explore

Seamus Heaney: A Call 2. Date: Objectives: 1. Introduce and annotate the poem Explore themes of Love, Death and Regret. Warm up: Perform one of the following two tasks: 1. What do you remember from Junior Cert Poetry about Seamus Heaney: Mid-term Break, Follower, Digging? Write it down. 2. Describe an ordinary phone call you might have with a loved one. Write about it – 2 -3 lines.

Introducing Seamus Heaney Date: Heaney describes his father as the typical Irish rural farmer.

Introducing Seamus Heaney Date: Heaney describes his father as the typical Irish rural farmer. What do you think this means. Physical, mental, social, financial.

Context for Heaney • He grew up a Catholic in Northern Ireland in the

Context for Heaney • He grew up a Catholic in Northern Ireland in the 1940’s. Tension between Catholics and Protestants shaped his life. • When he was starting to write, things started getting extremely violent in the North. He saw it as his duty to try to help by telling people what’s really important (love, family, nature, peace etc)

Context for this poem. Heaney is taking a common event (more common before mobile

Context for this poem. Heaney is taking a common event (more common before mobile phones) and turning it into a symbol. As he calls his father and waits for him to come to the phone, he thinks about the mystery of death and its effects on those who remain.

A Call by Seamus Heaney “Hold on, ” she said, “I’ll just run out

A Call by Seamus Heaney “Hold on, ” she said, “I’ll just run out and get him. The weather here’s so good, he took the chance To do a bit of weeding. ” So I saw him Down on his hands and knees beside the leek rig, Touching, inspecting, separating one Stalk from the other, gently pulling up Everything not tapered, frail and leafless, Pleased to feel each little weed-root break, But rueful also. . . Then found myself listening to The amplified grave ticking of hall clocks Where the phone lay unattended in a calm Of mirror glass and sunstruck pendulums. . . And found myself then thinking: if it were nowadays, This is how Death would summon Everyman. Next thing he spoke and I nearly said I loved him.

Notes– Form • There are irregular stanzas. The layout and absence of rhyme make

Notes– Form • There are irregular stanzas. The layout and absence of rhyme make it more like reading a text or a description of an everyday, ordinary experience. • What are the advantages of using everyday speech here instead of fancy rhymes?

Notes – line 1 -3 • The poem describes a once common experience: a

Notes – line 1 -3 • The poem describes a once common experience: a caller waiting for a loved one to come to the phone. • The speaker is calling for his father and it seems like we are overhearing or eavesdropping on this. • (Does he ever use the word ‘father’ here? Why do I believe it is? )

Notes – Lines 4 -10 • We move from the lady’s voice to the

Notes – Lines 4 -10 • We move from the lady’s voice to the poet’s after a line break. He imagines the loved one on his knees, humbly working with nature. • The speaker clearly knows and loves the man. He is able to imagine with detail what the man is doing. He even knows the man is “rueful” or sad about destroying weeds. • How many people do you know so well, you can imagine what they might be doing this very moment?

Notes – Lines 11 -14 • The poet is back to reality, where he

Notes – Lines 11 -14 • The poet is back to reality, where he can hear the empty hallway on the other end of the phone. • The silence, the absence of people or life and the clock (time as inescapable death) darken the poets mood. • Has anyone ever seen an old grandfather clock?

Notes – Lines 15 -16 • The poet imagines himself as a character in

Notes – Lines 15 -16 • The poet imagines himself as a character in a medieval play called ‘Everyman’. In this play, God sends ‘Death’ to collect a man so an account of his life may be given. • This is very different from the beginning of the poem. • (What do you think an account of a life would look like? )

Notes – Lines 17 • The final line is separated from the poem to

Notes – Lines 17 • The final line is separated from the poem to increase tension and conveys the relief of the narrator. • The word ‘nearly’ might show a lack of communication or that one things need not be said.

Questions: Remember “quotes”. 1. What image of the father does the poet convey? (What

Questions: Remember “quotes”. 1. What image of the father does the poet convey? (What is he like? ) PQE 2. Describe the hallway in the poem. How does the poet link this hallway and death? PQE 3. In your opinion, is the poem stronger or weaker for not having an open declaration of love in the final line? PQE (Quote the final line)