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Poppies

Explore the powerful emotions and symbolism portrayed in Jane Weir's poem "Poppies" as a mother says goodbye to her son going off to war. Discover the significance of poppies and the color red, and delve into the role of women during times of conflict. This thought-provoking poem evokes a multisensory experience, inviting readers to reflect on the impact of war and the complexities of love and loss.

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Poppies

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  1. Poppies By Jane Weir

  2. What do you think when you see this particular flower? What do you already know about what this flower stands for?

  3. What could the colour red symbolise?

  4. How would you feel… • If someone you loved was leaving to go and fight in a war?

  5. Context • Armistice day, when people remember those who have died fighting for their countries, is 11th November every year • Poppies are worn as a symbol of remembrance. • In the poem, a mother is saying goodbye to her son who is going to war.

  6. . Weir currently lives in Derbyshire and Manchester, where she writes and runs her own textile and design business She describes herself as Anglo-Italian Who is Jane Weir? A Very Brief Biography She was born in 1963 on a council estate on the outskirts of Manchester She is a textile designer, writer and poet She has also written about the poet Charlotte Mew and the writer Katherine Mansfield and, more recently, a poetic biography of two highly respected women textile designers. As an adult, she has lived ‘all over the place’, including in Belfast, Northern Ireland during the Troubles (in the 1980s). Her publications have been diverse and include a pamphlet called Alice (2006) which was based on the life of an early 20th century political activist, Alice Wheeldon.

  7. “Poppies” – “a multisensory explosion” • Weir’s poem ‘Poppies’ was commissioned by Carol Ann Duffy as part of a collection of ten contemporary war poems which were published in the Guardian in 2009, as part of a response to the escalating conflict in Afghanistan and the Iraq inquiry. • Weir describes being surprised by the ‘overwhelming response’ she had from readers across Europe to ‘Poppies’.

  8. “Poppies” – “a multisensory explosion” She commented in an interview that, ‘I wrote the piece from a woman's perspective, which is quite rare, as most poets who write about war have been men. As the mother of two teenage boys, I tried to put across how I might feel if they were fighting in a war zone.’

  9. “Poppies” – “a multisensory explosion” Weir has acknowledged that ‘A lot of my poems are narrative driven or scenarios’, and in ‘Poppies’ she tells the ‘story’ of a mother’s experience of pain and loss as her son leaves home to go to war.

  10. Annotation Ominous reminder that war kills Repetition emphasises the parallel between national and personal mouring Three days before Armistice Sunday and poppies had already been placed on individual war grave. Before you left, I pinned one onto your lapel, crimped petals, spasms of paper red, disrupting the blockade of yellow bias binding around your blazer School uniform? Army? Suggests she feels shut out from her son’s life Makes the reader think of injured body

  11. Another image of being wounded She is still treating him like a child Sellotapebandaged around my hand, I rounded up as many white cat hairs as I could, smoothed down your shirt’s upturned collar, steeled the softening of my face. I wanted to graze my nose across the tip of your nose, play at being Eskimos like we did when you were little. I resisted the impulse to run my fingers through the gelled blackthorns of your hair. all my words felt flattened, rolled, turned into felt Alliteration Suggests she feels shut out from her son’s life Metaphor – suggests he’s no longer a child because he’s styled his hair. His prickly hair suggests he is unapproachable

  12. Sudden movement suggests breaking a boundary Simile shows the world from the son’s perspective – exciting slowly melting, I was brave, as I walked with you, to the front door, threw it open, the world overflowing like a treasure chest. A split second and you were away, intoxicated. After you’d gone I went into your bedroom, released a song bird from its cage. Later a single dove flew from the pear tree, and this is where it has led me, skirting the church yard walls, my stomach busy making trucks, darts, pleats, hat-less, without a winter coat or reinforcements of scarf, gloves The son’s excitement contrasts with the mother’s sadness Symbolic of son leaving Metaphor – suggests he’s no longer a child because he’s styled his hair. His prickly hair suggests he is unapproachable

  13. What is the role of women during times of conflict? Consider how the poet makes use of gender stereotypes within her poem...

  14. Exploring the text: Clothing and textile language * Find all the references to clothing. • Why are they used? What are the associations? Sensory details * What sensory details are there in stanza 2? • Why are they used? What connotations do they have? Verbs * Track the verbs used throughout the poem. * What do you notice? How do they help to reveal different emotions?

  15. Question Time • Is the poem about war or a poem about families? 2. How does the title refer to the poem? 3. Why does the mother have so many feelings of anxiety and fear? 4. Why does the poet use the metaphor of a bird? 5. Do you think the son is still alive? • Explain.

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