Tuesday, 12 January 2021

The Jaguar by Ted Hughes

 The Jaguar by Ted Hughes

 

The apes yawn and adore their fleas in the sun.

The parrots shriek as if they were on fire, or strut

Like cheap tarts to attract the stroller with the nut.

Fatigued with indolence, tiger and lion

 

Lie still as the sun. The boa-constrictor’s coil

Is a fossil. Cage after cage seems empty, or

Stinks of sleepers from the breathing straw.

It might be painted on a nursery wall.

 

But who runs like the rest past these arrives

At a cage where the crowd stands, stares, mesmerized,

As a child at a dream, at a jaguar hurrying enraged

Through prison darkness after the drills of his eyes

 

On a short fierce fuse. Not in boredom—

The eye satisfied to be blind in fire,

By the bang of blood in the brain deaf the ear—

He spins from the bars, but there’s no cage to him

 

More than to the visionary his cell:

His stride is wildernesses of freedom:

The world rolls under the long thrust of his heel.

Over the cage floor the horizons come.

 

Questions

1

What do you notice about the form of the poem? [shape, rhyme scheme, rhythm, line structure]

2

Who is speaking?

3

What is the setting? [physical surroundings, time of day, time of year]

4

What is the poem about? [narrative, description, reflection]

5

Identify important language features [phonetic techniques, imagery, language features]

6

How do these techniques influence readers?

7

Comment on a theme in the poem

 

In ‘The Jaguar’ Ted Hughes describes a jaguar in a cage at London Zoo. In the poem. The jaguar attracts all manner of attention from the crowds at the zoo, far more than any of the other animals.

Hughes uses comparison in the poem. What does Hughes compare the jaguar with in the poem?

What do you make of the line, ‘Over the cage floor the horizons come’?