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The Forge

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
275 views

The Forge

Uploaded by

api-236470498
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Forge

Seamus Heaney

Themes: Craft
The Forge is a celebration of the blacksmiths craft. Describes him with an almost childish sense of wonder. It is
Magical and mysterious Beautiful Something marvellous

The poet is drawn to the physicality of the blacksmiths work. Sense of manliness. Such physical work with raw materials appeals to the poet. There is a sense perhaps in which he might feel inadequate in comparison being a poet, working with a pen and paper.

Poetry
The Forge can be read as an allegory for the poet and the creation of poetry.
Blacksmith taking scraps of metal and beating them into beautiful shapes like the poet creating a poem The place where poetry and art originates is a mysterious and unknowable place Poetic inspiration is unpredictable just as the appearance of sparks can never be foretold. But when it occurs it is wonderful. Anvil = poets desk.

Changing World
The Forge describes a world that is changing. The clatter of hoofs is being replaced with the sound of cars. The poem suggests that in the modern world the blacksmiths craft will soon be lost. There is also a suggestion that the cars are not being made from real iron, but cheaper, flimsier materials.

Childhood
The poem evokes a childhood mentality. We see this in the childs reluctance to venture inside the forge.

Religion
Like a church, the forge is a mysterious and almost sacred place where fantastic things can happen. Anvil = alter. Like the church, the forge and the blacksmiths work seems like a solid feature in the community: Set there immovable. However, both are vanishing features of the modern world.

Language
Sonnet (14 lines) ABBACDDCEFGFEF rhyming scheme Poem is full of sounds onomatopoeia Anvil is central and Heaney uses a simile and a metaphor to describe it.

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