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Prospice Prospice

Prospice - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2016-04-21

Prospice - PPT Presentation

What do we know about this poem What does the title tell us Context Prospice look forward in Latin This poem was written in the autumn following Elizabeths death Is the speaker Browning The poem is a powerful portrait of a wifes death and a husband who is looki ID: 287671

poem death face fight death poem fight face pain struggle speaker prospice fear minute arch pain

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Slide1

Prospice

What do we know about this poem?What does the title tell us?Slide2

Context

Prospice

= ‘look forward’ in Latin

This poem was written in the autumn following Elizabeth’s death. Is the speaker Browning? The poem is a powerful portrait of a wife’s death and a husband who is ‘looking forward’ to death when he will see her again.

Browning’s

philosophy of life was always one of courage, of making the adventurous attempt in face of difficulty. The Arch Fear (Death) did not terrify him. The poem expresses his undaunted spirit in the face of death and his firm belief in the eventual reunion with his beloved wife. As he had faced the joyous contest of living, so he would meet the final struggle – confidently, with assurance of personal struggle

.Slide3

Language and ImagerySlide4

Fear death? - to

feel the fog in my throat,    The mist in my

f

ace,

When the snows begin, and the blasts denote    I am nearing the place,

The

p

ower of the night, the

press of the storm, 5    The post of the foe;Where he stands, the Arch Fear in a visible form,    Yet the strong man must go:For the journey is done and the summit attained.    And the barriers fall, 10Though a battle's to fight ere the guerdon be gained,    The reward of it all.I was ever a fighter, so - one fight more,    The best and the last!

Death

rewardSlide5

I would hate that death

bandaged my eyes, and forbore, 15    And bade me creep past

.

No! let me taste the whole of it, fare like my peers,    The heroes of old,Bear the brunt, in a minute pay glad life's arrears

    Of pain, darkness and cold.

20

For sudden the

worst turns the best to the brave,    The black minute's at end,And the elements' rage, the fiend-voices that rave,    Shall dwindle, shall blend,Shall change, shall become first a peace out of pain, 25    Then a

light, then thy breast,O thou soul of my soul! I shall clasp thee again,

And with God be the rest!

Refrain from doing something

Reference to the practice of bandaging the eyes of those executed by shooting

An unpaid, overdue debt or an unfulfilled obligationSlide6

Imagery

Personification of Death, as an enemy to fightExtended metaphor of battleUse of contrasts to represent the fight with (for?) death: ‘pain’, ‘darkness’, then a ‘black minute’ before ‘peace out of pain’ and ‘light’. This is simplistic, but the polarity underscores his courage.

Does not hide the darkness and pain of death, nor suggest it brings nobility (perhaps to suggest this would be to “creep past” it)- the speaker will face death and its terrors with honesty and strength Slide7

Form

Dramatic monologue, likely Browning as the speakerWho is the silent listener? This seems like a call to arms for all mankind (cf. Lost Leader)‘Prospice

’ means to ‘look ahead’ – a positive take on death and its rewards. The use of Latin suggests facing death is a timeless issue. Slide8

Structure

One stanza = singularity of speaker’s mind; he is set on his goalMajority of poem alternates trimeter (three feet) and pentameter (five feet) but this is not always consistent and breaks down towards the middle (especially lines 15-20) = the struggle/fight with death

Rhyme scheme:

ababcdcd

= speaker’s steady movement ahead towards death

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