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Page 1: Teacher-of-English.comStorm on the Island GCSE Literature Seamus Heaney

Teacher-of-Teacher-of-English.comEnglish.com

Storm on the IslandStorm on the Island

GCSE Literature Seamus GCSE Literature Seamus HeaneyHeaney

Page 2: Teacher-of-English.comStorm on the Island GCSE Literature Seamus Heaney

Slide Contents

Author Author What is it About?What is it About?

Language Language StructureStructureThemesThemes

Social and Historical Social and Historical ContextContextLinksLinks

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AuthorAuthor

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Seamus Seamus HeaneyHeaney

Seamus Heaney was born in Northern Ireland in 1939, the eldest of nine children. His father was a farmer in rural County Derry and much of Heaney's poetry is about the countryside and farm life of his childhood. At the age of 12 Heaney won a scholarship to the boarding school of St Columb's College in the city of Derry, forty miles from his rural home.

Page 5: Teacher-of-English.comStorm on the Island GCSE Literature Seamus Heaney

What is it What is it About?About?

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Storm Storm on the on the IslandIslandThe poem describes the experience of being in a cliff top

cottage on an island off the coast of Ireland during a storm. Heaney describes the ground, the sea and the wind. The people in the cottage are isolated and can do nothing against the powerful and violent weather. The poem describes the violent side of nature. Similar to Patrolling Barnegat nature is “savage” and hostile and like Whitman, Heaney uses a series of military metaphors: the wind (like a fighter-bomber) “dives and strafes” while space is a “salvo” and air “bombards” the islanders.The poem explains that the island dwellers build their houses small and “squat” - but when the storm breaks, they can do nothing but “sit tight”. The wind is so powerful that the sea spray hits “the very windows” of the houses. Heaney conveys the unpredictability of nature through the simile of a cat - much of the time it is “company” (friendly) and “tame” (safe) but in the storm it turns “savage” and “spits”.

Click image for a

reading with slides

Page 7: Teacher-of-English.comStorm on the Island GCSE Literature Seamus Heaney

What’s going on?

Lines What Happens?

1 - 5 Heaney describes how the community prepares for the storm

6 - 13

14 - 19

In this poem Heaney describes the violence of a storm as it hits a small island community but can you say exactly what

is happening?

Page 8: Teacher-of-English.comStorm on the Island GCSE Literature Seamus Heaney

What’s going on?

Lines What Happens?

1 - 5 Heaney describes how the community prepares for the storm

6 - 13 There is a change in tone from safety to danger. The violence and noise of the storm is described.

14 - 19 The fear of the islanders is conveyed through images of war.

In this poem Heaney describes the violence of a storm as it hits a small island community but can you say exactly what

is happening?

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Check Your Check Your UnderstandingUnderstanding

How much do you know about Seamus Heaney and the poem Storm on the

Island?

1. Where are many of Heaney’s poems set?2. What happened to Heaney at the age of 12?3. How do the islanders prepare for the storm?4. What other poem from the anthology

describes a storm at sea?5. What animal is the storm compared to?6. Why is the animal simile effective?7. What words suggest that the storm-hit island

is like a battle zone?

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Language Language &&

StructureStructure

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GlossaryGlossaryMatch the vocabulary from the poemwith the correct definition:

wizened (line 3) bombard with artillery shells

stacks / stooks (lines 4/5) continuous firing of artillery

strafes (line 17) dried up & shrivelled

salvo (line 17) haystacks / bundles of corn

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GlossaryGlossaryHow many did you work out correctly?

wizened (line 3) dried up & shrivelled

stacks / stooks (lines 4/5) haystacks / bundles of corn

strafes (line 17) bombard with artillery shells

salvo (line 17) Continuous firing of artillery

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LanguageLanguageStorm on the Island is full of images of fear and violence. Although the poem begins with images of safety and security (‘we are prepared’) the tone changes from line 6 and a sense of loneliness and fear takes over. Nature becomes violent as the usually pleasant trees and the sea become frightening and dangerous forces. To emphasise the violence of the storm Heaney uses descriptive words and phrases usually associated with war such as blast, bombarded, salvo, etc. To involve the reader in his fear of the storm the poet uses direct address (2nd person) ‘you’ throughout to bring us closer to the experience.

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ImageryFind examples from the poem which suggest

that the storm is like an enemy attack.

QuoteQuote ExplanationExplanation

It pummels your house

The word pummel means to hit somebody or something with repeated blows, this conveys the image of the house being attacked by an aggressive force.

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Poetic Techniques

TechniqueTechnique DefinitionDefinition

Simile Using as or like to compare two things (her eyes shone like diamonds)

Metaphor The use of the same letter at the start of words

(the sea sizzled on the sandy shore)Alliteration A figure of speech not meant literally (I was

over the moon)

Onomatopoeia describing an object as if it had human qualities (The lonely crippled tree)

Personification A word which imitates the sound it represents

(smash, crack, plop)

Match the technique with the correct definition.

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Poetic TechniquesPoetic TechniquesThink about the poetic techniques used in the poem. Copy down the chart below. Find examples in the poem and write down the effect created.

Technique Evidence Effect

Alliteration ‘rock and roof’ Repetition of the strong ‘r’ sound emphasises the solidity and sturdiness of the houses.

personification

metaphor

simile

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StructureThe structure of the poem Storm on the Island reflects the feelings of the islanders. At first the community feels safe and secure and words such as ‘prepared’, ‘rock' and ‘good slate' convey this sense of solidity and assurance.

However as the storm begins, feelings of security are eclipsed by fear; the trees raise a ‘tragic chorus’, the sea is ‘exploding’ and there is ‘no natural shelter’.

By the end of the poem the people appear helpless, isolated and at the mercy of the elements, waiting and hoping for the storm to end. There is is a clear contrast between the solid reassurance of the first few lines and the fear of a terrifying invisible force at the end – ‘It is a huge nothing that we fear.’

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ThemesThemes

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Comparative ThemesComparative ThemesNature

Heaney writes about how nature can be cruel and destructive. The strength of the storm is conveyed through the use of images of war and the people in the poem appear weak and vulnerable. Heaney explores how nature can turn on humans unexpectedly “like a tame cat / Turned savage”.

Other poems which explore the relationship between man and nature are Patrolling Barnegat, At a Potato Digging, Digging and The Field Mouse.

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Comparative ThemesComparative ThemesPoliticsStorm on the Island contains a metaphor for the political storm that raged across Northern Ireland in the second half of the twentieth century. The storm pummelling the island in the poem is a metaphor for the violence in Northern Ireland.

Other poems which explicitly explore politics are The Field Mouse and A Difficult Birth.

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Social & Social & Historical Historical ContextContext

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Storm on the Island

On another level On another level Storm on the IslandStorm on the Island refers to the refers to the troubles in Northern Irelandtroubles in Northern Ireland that took place in the that took place in the latter years of the twentieth century. Ilatter years of the twentieth century. Images of terrorist violence can be found throughout the poem. Words such as blast, exploding, fear, bombarded don’t just describe the literal storm but also represent the storm of violence happening in Northern Ireland during the Troubles. The first 8 letters of the poem spell out the word Stormont – the name of the Government buildings of Northern Ireland in Belfast. The word island also has an obvious phonetic similarity to the word Ireland. Therefore the poem works on two levels: as a description of a storm and as an extended metaphor for the political situation in Northern Ireland.

The poem has a hidden meaning do you know what it is?

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Causes for the Conflict between the Protestants and

the Catholics of Northern Ireland

Divided LoyaltiesEducation

EmploymentHousing

Voting Rights

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Divided LoyaltiesDuring the troubles Protestant and Catholics were intolerant of one another. Each gave their allegiance to different countries. Protestants wanted to continue to be part of the United Kingdom whereas Catholics wanted Northern Ireland reunited with the Republic of Ireland. Protestants feared the idea of union with the Republic of Ireland and believed that

Catholics would not be tolerant of Protestant beliefs. Catholics could not forget the persecution they suffered during England’s conquest of Ireland and deeply mistrust the Protestants.

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The building tensions in Northern Ireland resulted in conflict and violence. Homes were petrol-bombed and looted, businesses and pubs were burnt and destroyed. The IRA was an illegal organisation formed by the Northern Irish Catholics to use violence to rid Northern Ireland of the British Army and the representatives of the British government. Within 2 decades of the conflict , many people were killed. The conflict resulted in many deaths involving innocent victims an increasing number of people growing up with intense prejudice towards each other and an adverse development on the economic and social landscape of the country.

Tensions Turn to Violence

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Click here for

video

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LinksLinks

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Useful StuffUseful StuffBBC Bitesize:http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/

english_literature/poetheaney/stormontheislandrev1.shtml

Podcast reading and discussion:Go to http://www.podcastrevision.co.uk/Lit.html andclick on ‘Storm on the Island’.Pupils can download this onto ipod/MP3 player for revision purposes

YouTube contains a lot of footage from the Troubles but please be careful - a lot of it is very partisan.