Saturday, October 12, 2019
Blackberry Picking Essay -- Poems Poetry Berries Essays
Blackberry Picking    Blackberry picking is about greed, growing up, how we struggle in life  and how pleasure can be taken away from us very quickly. Heaney  writes retrospectively, about the times he as a child would go  blackberry-picking every year, as a metaphor for these experiences.    The first stanza of the poem is mostly quite positive and  enthusiastic. The first part of the stanza describes the the ripening  of the berries, ââ¬Å"given heavy rain and sun for a full week, the  blackberries would ripenâ⬠. He also gives us an image of the berries.   Heaney uses the metaphor ââ¬Å"a glossy purple clotâ⬠ for the ripe berries,  and the similie ââ¬Å"hard as a knotâ⬠ for the unripe berries. When you say  ââ¬Å"hard as a knotâ⬠, the sound is quite short, indicating that the  berries are not yet ripe. It then continues to write about the frenzy  of picking them - ââ¬Å"lust for pickingâ⬠.    Heaney presents the tasting of the berries as a sensual process, and  also uses words like ââ¬Å"fleshâ⬠, and ââ¬Å"thickened wineâ⬠ to make the berries  sound so desirable. Alsoââ¬Å"lustâ⬠, to describe the childrens  unrestrained desire and appetite for them.     Heaney uses a lot of figurative language in this poem.   Personification and a series of metaphors and similies are used:   ââ¬Å"flesh was sweet like thickened wineâ⬠, the berry is personified and  there is use of a similie, the metaphor ââ¬Å"summerââ¬â¢s bloodâ⬠, referring to  the hard work and nourishment that nature has put into it, and then  suddenly it is taken away by the children.    It is the peoples ââ¬Å"hungerâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"lustâ⬠for the berries that sends them  out to fill up their ââ¬Å"milk-cans, pea-tins, jam-potsâ⬠ until they are  fully filled up with blackberries ââ¬â ââ¬Å"until the tinkling bottom has  been coveredâ⬠. Onomatopoeia is used - ââ¬Å"tinkling...              ...ow long and painful the process of  picking the blackberries are, how they got their hands full of thorn  pricks. Then after a short while, the berries start to rot, and the  ââ¬Å"sweet fleshâ⬠ of the berries would turn sour.    Heaney writes this poem to reveal that life is about disappointment,  and that good things wonââ¬â¢t last, while relating it back to a childhood  event of his past. It is also about growing up, and ageing, as we get  the contrast of the adults and childrens view in the last stanza.    I found this poem very enjoyable and interesting to study, because  when I was reading the poem, it almost felt like I could taste the  blackberries. I like his use of figurative language, especially the  way he described the berries. Another reason why I liked this poem is  because I like the way Heaney uses past events of his life to express  certain ideas about life.                        
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