The speaker is relaxing in the kitchen with a glass of wine while cooking vegetables. She sees her husband in the garden turning objects to gold, including a pear tree branch. Realizing his new power is real, she questions if he is decorating the tree with lights, sensing something is wrong. He returns inside, closing the blinds, and she realizes he has truly changed with his new ability to turn everything to gold.
The speaker is relaxing in the kitchen with a glass of wine while cooking vegetables. She sees her husband in the garden turning objects to gold, including a pear tree branch. Realizing his new power is real, she questions if he is decorating the tree with lights, sensing something is wrong. He returns inside, closing the blinds, and she realizes he has truly changed with his new ability to turn everything to gold.
The speaker is relaxing in the kitchen with a glass of wine while cooking vegetables. She sees her husband in the garden turning objects to gold, including a pear tree branch. Realizing his new power is real, she questions if he is decorating the tree with lights, sensing something is wrong. He returns inside, closing the blinds, and she realizes he has truly changed with his new ability to turn everything to gold.
The speaker is relaxing in the kitchen with a glass of wine while cooking vegetables. She sees her husband in the garden turning objects to gold, including a pear tree branch. Realizing his new power is real, she questions if he is decorating the tree with lights, sensing something is wrong. He returns inside, closing the blinds, and she realizes he has truly changed with his new ability to turn everything to gold.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 7
Analysis of Mrs Midas
Sta Point/Language example Purpose/ Effect
n Feature za 1 Simple sentence It was late September Statement sets scene in past. Past tense Timeframe quite specific. End of harvest time, looking forward to winter. Colours of autumn: golds, yellows. Foreshadows change to the Midas’s relationship, which is coming to an end. Contrast, though, between natural ending of harvest and unnatural ending cause by Midas’ selfishness. Compound I’d just poured a glass of Emphasizes that an action in the past complex sentence wine,/ begun to unwind, finished before another action in the past started. Suggests to reader a using past perfect while the vegetables story is about to be told. Indicates the tense (had) cooked. speaker is telling the story at a later point in time from where she is looking back on the past. Sensory images Wine=colour (visual Creates sense of immediacy, pleasure qualities), sensation on in the moment, feeling of luxury & comfort palate (touch/ taste) Vegetables cooked=smell, taste Half-rhyme Wine/unwind Long vowel (‘i’) creates a musical quality pleasing to the ear; links the alcohol to speaker’s growing feeling of relaxation, a sensation which also impacts on the reader. personification The kitchen/ filled with the An object (the kitchen) is given human smell of itself, relaxed, its qualities. Enhances the cosy, domestic steamy breath/gently nature of the scene. The kitchen is at blanching the windows one with the speaker, linked by the act of producing delicious food. Everything seems comfortable, safe and well. simile Wiped the other’s glass like Compares the windows to a human face a brow — a precise picture is created of the speaker’s gesture, whereby wiping the window means she can see her husband in the garden. What she sees him doing (turning things to gold, an expression of his monetary greed) marks the moment of change, which will destroy their marriage. Enjambment begun Although the sense carries on like a (overflow lines) to unwind prose sentence and emulates the patterns of speech, the poet breaks the line after “begun” to create a subtle rhythm. The cadence of the poem (its measure or beat of movement, as in dancing or marching) is affected. As a result, the reader is more focused on the speaker’s experience of unwinding and relaxing—which means what happens next is the greater shock. onomatopoeia snapping Where the sound echoes the sense; the plosive ‘snap’ contrasts to the long vowels of the previous lines (e.g. wine/ unwind, steamy, blanching). Marks a change of mood, with connotations of violence —the tone is no longer relaxed and slow, it is edgy and disturbing. 2 Personification the dark of the ground The subject (dark) is active, drinking the seems to drink the light of object (sky). The power of the dark is the sky emphasised, growing at the expense of light. It prefigures what will happen to the Midases’ relationship. Verbal oppositions Dark/light; ground/sky Emphasises contrast, mythic battle between forces of nature Parallel structures Dark of the ground/light of Creates rhythm and a beat; draws the sky attention to the threat represented by Midas’s wish being granted. Allusion Twig in his hand was gold Despite the contemporary setting, we recognise the underlying classical myth of Kind Midas; realise this story is about greed and avarice Coordinating And then Joins sentence to he last one, following conjunction the patterns of spoken speech; Builds idea the speaker is anxious to share her story. alliteration plucked a pear Draws attention to the action--a demonstration of Midas’s new power to turn objects to gold. Half-rhyme Fondante d’Automne/on Highlights the visual quality of the gold pear, and thus the terrible power Midas now has to create wealth simile Like a light bulb Emphasises shape of the pear and brightness of the gold and therefore its monetary value Irony Fondante d’Automne Means “melting Fall” (=Autumn); developed in C19 France; green with a golden hue; grown as dessert pear. The Midases (who are English in this poem) grow a French variety which may symbolise their aspirations to elegance and style. Instead the solid gold pear represents imminent destruction of their life style, hopes and dreams. Rhetorical Is he putting fairy lights in The question signals Mrs Midas is question the tree? disturbed. She senses something is not right, but is not yet really worried. 3 Parallel simple He came into the Paints picture of an ordinary man sentences house...He drew the blinds coming home doing ordinary things, but whose impact is extraordinary (everything turning to gold). The speaker is beginning to realise her husband has truly changed. Internal rhyme Blinds/mind Hypnotic sound effect of long vowels, suggesting the speaker is in a state of shock. Allusion/reference Field of the Cloth of Gold Henry VIII of England met King Francois I of France at Calais in 1520. The two kings practically bankrupted their countries trying to show who was the richest. Midas is turning everything in their house to gold and is in the process beginning to bankrupt his marriage. Allusion/reference Miss Macready The name of CAD’s history teacher at school Conversational… Simile; He sat in that chair like a This Midas is an ordinary man, but his Allusion/reference King on a burnished throne new powers make him like a King; echoes of Shakespeare’s Queen Cleopatra sailing on the river Cydnus to meet Anthony, who will become her lover. Irony in that Midas is a vulnerable and fallible man, not a real King, and he will lose love rather than gain love. Listing of 3, Strange, wild, vain Describes Midas as out of character, adjectives self-focused, self-absorbed Interrogative What in the name of God is Used colloquially as an exclamation; sentence going on? betrays the speaker’s heightened sense of anxiety 4 simple sentence I served up the meal. Mrs Midas is trying to maintain normality, go through her usual routine despite the odd behaviour of her husband Alliteration corn on the cob The hard ‘c’s introduce an unsettling Dissonance element to a normal meal. In the allusion original tale Ovid refers to the ‘grain of Ceres’ echoed here in Duffy’s version metaphor The teeth of the rich The shape and colour of the gold corn provide a vision image for the reader. Of course only rich people can afford gold fillings too verb toyed Connotations of childishness tell us that Mrs Midas is still enjoying the novelty of his new talent and hasn’t yet realised the serious implications of his gift. listing This is a catalogue of golden things touched by Midas’ roaming hand. The picture is of an idle touching with no thought or purpose. Midas is amusing himself with his newfound gift. adjective shaking She works out the danger… List/rule of 3 a fragrant, bone-dry white Indicates that the Midases value from Italy sophisticated living (like the French pear tree) Trivial detail a feature of the poem, making it more conversational in tone alliteration glass, goblet, golden Visual … transformation nouns chalice Hard gs Last supper allusions 5 simple sentence It was then that I started to separated from cause by verse break … scream. shock
simple sentence, He sank to his knees. simple action showing shock
use of hard k long vowel After we had both calmed Contrast to short sentences (sound) sounds, complex down Long vowels indicate some recovery sentence from the initial shock. Also reinforce calmness. verb made She rather than he is in control humour I locked the cat in the Humour is consistent with story-telling cellar. The toilet I didn’t Mrs Midas is smart enough… mind. She now can see the funny side of the situation. 6 play on words Look, we all have wishes, Tone is bitter? Annoyed? Incredulous? granted. But who has their She is educated, intelligent wishes granted? pronoun Him. Male, like original story minor sentence Emphasis on the fact that… rhetorical Do you know about gold? Keeps audience interested, story=telling question device Make reader think vocab choice Feeds, aurum, slakes, She educated – sophisticated vocab entranced, luteous Aurum = latin for gold It cannot sustain, therefore it should not be important to anyone humour you’ll be able to give up Ironic smoking for good. Humour gives ‘relief’ in the poem, not all grim and negative Story-telling after the event, shows that she is ‘over’ it, or trying to make light of a horrendous situation 7 minor sentence Separate beds. Presented as a statement with no argument vocab choice petrified Not only scared but petrified also adjective means turned to stone (ie gold) allusion …the spare room into the He is literally turning everything into metaphor tomb of Tutankhamun gold but tomb connotes death. Tutankhamun had all the riches in the world but it didn’t do him any good ‘cos he was still… dead – as Mr Midas will be shortly preposition then A position in the past. That Mr Midas should have chosen to ruin that closeness makes the tale more poignant adjective halcyon Emphasises the sound relationship that they had had simile unwrapping each other, Present = excitement, pleasure, rapidly, like presents, fast anticipation food Fast food indicates no ‘preparation’, a sudden, overwhelming passion adjective honeyed embrace Normally a pleasant expression, irony referring to the sweetness of honey but here, the golden colour of honey would mean death for her imagery turn my lips to a work of = a statue that someone could admire art because she had been turned into a solid object 8 idiom When it comes to the Language suitable for a tale, a crunch conversation pun Who… can live with a heart This can be taken 2 ways – who can live of gold? with someone who is dangerously focussed on gold, and no one can actually live if their beating heart is turned into solid metal. Again, the phrase if normally used in a positive, pleasant way, but Duffy has subverted it for her own purpose. Mrs Midas is using wry humour again allusion I dreamt I bore his child In Hawthorne’s version, Midas had a child which was turned into gold. The child, too, represents the loss of Mrs Midas’ dream for a child because it is now impossible for her to conceive. onomatopoeia ore = au , chemical symbol for gold, aural play on words Ore is raw metal simile its little tongue like a Latch, a catch for a door or window, precious latch mobile but stiff metaphor its amber eyes holding Suggests flies caught at the centre of a their pupils like flies web alliteration burned in my breasts The sound in pronouncing these b s plosive echoes the pain produced by the un- consonants drunk milk in her breasts. It evokes a cry of anguish. 9 verb So he had to move out She gave him no choice noun glade This word is normally used in pleasant irony pastoral scenes. It has positive connotations phraseology under the cover of dark Is she ashamed or protecting him? simple sentences So he had to move out. There is a sense of Mrs Midas being in He sat in the back. control. The sentences are statements, over which there is no discussion, no dissent. phraseology odd times Gives a sense of a period of time idiom a good way off As in story-telling 10. pronouns You knew you were getting 2nd person phraseology indicates the close audience to whom Mrs Midas is speaking metaphor a beautiful lemon mistake Instead of a fruit that should be hanging from the tree, it is a golden, dead, hare allusion the music of Pan In the original tale, King Midas was besotted with Pan’s (God of the woods)music minor sentence Listen Is this Midas saying “Listen”? If so, Duffy does not put this in speech marks which eliminates his voice in the same way that we never know his first name. He is referred to anonymously as ‘he’ cliché The last straw Colour idiom Informal speech again Mrs Midas can no longer support her husband. 11 idiom What gets me now Informal language to a listener pronoun me We are all egocentric! simple sentence Pure selfishness. Although at first glance we can see that juxtaposition Mr Midas has been selfish in his wish, but we can also read this as her selfishness in only thinking of “me”. She expresses no sympathy for her husband in the poem, and yes, she is thinking about herself. preposition here Tells us that she is now in a different place and is addresses some unseen inhabitants of “here” phraseology in certain lights, dawn, late Are these the “odd times” that she had afternoon visited him? Those times, certainly afternoon would be associated with Mr Midas for the time when his wish came true and for the golden light at that time allusion bowl of apples Adam and Eve – this time it is the Adam figure who has succumbed to temptation with disastrous consequences rather than Eve in the Garden of Eden. Apples may be golden in colour The original King Midas changed apples into gold. repetition His hands, his warm Emphasises her loss hands… his touch