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At Tower Peak Step Analysis

The poem describes change and development disconnecting nature and civilization. Seen from a mountain summit, the speaker notes urbanization like housing and clogged freeways replacing meadows, while scholars fill academies. The speaker feels nostalgia and hopelessness about this division between man and nature. Through imagery like smoke from forest fires and the haze over distant valleys, the poem conveys a message calling for a unity between man and nature to find spiritual fulfillment. Hyperbole and paradox are used to highlight the disconnect between an expanding urbanization and the surrounding natural environment.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
183 views3 pages

At Tower Peak Step Analysis

The poem describes change and development disconnecting nature and civilization. Seen from a mountain summit, the speaker notes urbanization like housing and clogged freeways replacing meadows, while scholars fill academies. The speaker feels nostalgia and hopelessness about this division between man and nature. Through imagery like smoke from forest fires and the haze over distant valleys, the poem conveys a message calling for a unity between man and nature to find spiritual fulfillment. Hyperbole and paradox are used to highlight the disconnect between an expanding urbanization and the surrounding natural environment.

Uploaded by

tijil
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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At Tower Peak

Every tan rolling meadow will turn into housing


Freeways are clogged all day
Academies packed with scholars writing papers
City people lean and dark
This land most real
As its western-tending golden slopes
And bird-entangled central valley swamps
Sea-lion, urchin coasts
Southerly salmon-probes
Into the aromatic almost-Mexican hills
Along a range of granite peaks
The names forgotten,
An eastward running river that ends out in desert
The chipping ground-squirrels in the tumbled blocks
The gloss of glacier ghost on slab
Where we wake refreshed from ten hours sleep
After a long day’s walking
Packing burdens to the snow
Wake to the same old world of no names,
No things, new as ever, rock and water,
Cool dawn birdcalls, high jet contrails.
A day or two or million, breathing
A few steps back from what goes down
In the current realm.
A kind of ice age, spreading, filling valleys
Shaving soils, paving fields, you can walk in it
Live in it, drive through it then
It melts away
For whatever sprouts
After the age of
Frozen hearts. Flesh-carved rock
And gusts on the summit,
Smoke from forest fires is white,
The haze above the distant valley like a dusk.
It’s just one world, this spine of rock and streams
And snow, and the wash of gravels, silts
Sands, bunchgrasses, saltbrush, bee-fields,
Twenty million human people, downstream, here below.
At Tower Peak Explanation Textual Evidence
S-Subject Meadows, housing, freeways,
What is the poem about? - Disconnect between academies, peaks coastlines,
nature and nature
civilisation/man.
- About change and
development
- Subject overlooking a
mountain range/valley
from a summit

T- Theme - Change: wants a - Urbanisation


What is the poet’s message? positive change but - Change
warns the reader of a - Man vs Nature
negative change as a
result of a division
between Man and
Nature.
- Calls for a unity
between man and
nature.
- Air to breathe-
spiritual fulfilment

- Urbanisation
- Change
- Man vs Nature
E- Emotion - Curious and concerned
What emotions are being - Sense of hopelessness
expressed in the poem? - Nostalgia
P- Poetic devices - Hyperbole Hyperbole: “Every tan
What devices are used and - Imagery rolling…”.
how do they con - Paradox
- Oxymoron
- Allusion
-
Urbanisation is changing man. Due to expansion “Every tan rolling meadow turns into housing”. This
hyperbolic statement expresses Snyder’s frustration at man’s disregard for nature. Furthermore,
“Freeways are paradoxically clogged all day”, the contrast of the imagery created by the word
freeways vs clogged leads to

The ice age is used metaphorically throughout the poem

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