Preview

Sunny Prestatyn by Phil Larkin

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
319 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Sunny Prestatyn by Phil Larkin
Sunny Prestatyn by Phil Larkin

The poem Sunny Prestatyn presents a bleak picture of reality against a deceiving advertising imagery in a melancholic, yet entertaining manner. The semantic field of sex is used throughout the poem.

In the first stanza we are presented with a picture perfect holiday resort’s advertising poster, carefully composed around an alluring and beautiful, pristine girl. Symbolism, in tautened white satin, is used to emphasize her alleged purity as she symbolizes the resort itself. Yet this image is subtly sexualized as she is presented as the embodiment of lush behind her, “expands from her thighs and spread breast-lifting arms”. The image is joyful and welcoming.

The second stanza begins with the defacing of the girl’s face ,”she was slapped up”. The mood changes as the ugly reality resurfaces in symbolic, yet equally disturbing brutalization of the girl’s. The imagery becomes vulgar and pornographic, “huge tits”, as opposed to soft word “breasts” in the first stanza. The word class changes accordingly and becomes much stronger, “”a tuberous cock and balls” with a shocking effect on the audience.

The enjambment is used to continue into the third stanza, suggesting the continuous and repeated attacks, aggressively increased in stages therefore, implying that more than one culprit is responsible. This, in turn carries a connotation of a mob mentality that dominates in Prestatyn, a stark contrast to the suggested holiday paradise from the original poster. The poem closes with a familiar phrase,” too good for this world”, an analogy to “pearls before swines”. A gentile, clean, beautiful and helpless woman, an object of one’s desire brutalized and torn apart by the malevolence that really resides in Prestatyn, ending up as an offending image that had to be removed from public eye.

The poem concludes with a simple, bleak message, “Fight Cancer”. This alone could be symbolic, not just of reality by of the cancerous behavior

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The poem takes the form of a sonnet, most typically known as a gesture of love. However, in the poem Harwood mocks this love-theme. The woman is loved for her “softness”, “mane” and her “smell” by the beast that personifies a man. These are purely physical qualities. Insight into who the woman is beyond her body is intentionally omitted from the beat’s reminiscing. The attraction felt for woman is only skin deep and is misguided by the beast’s “rank longing”. The sexualisation in the first stanza is developed by the image of an evocative “thigh”. A carnal motif that is hidden behind the idealised ‘true love’ that is divulged shamelessly by Harwood. Subsequently the beast’s ‘love’ is only the lustful thoughts of her body. By unveiling the undertones of the couple’s erotic relationship, Harwood is being critical of the false notions of innocent attraction - replacing them with the “love feast” that is sexual desire. It is Harwood’s challenge against the orthodox expectation ‘purity’…

    • 891 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This poem starts in the boast: "When I take my girl to the swimming party...," continuing with the first juxtaposition of male with female genders, for the boys "tower and bristle," suggesting something naturally intimidating is inherent to the male gender. This is followed by the description of the girl, who is "smooth and sleek," an alliteration that denotes the use of diction, for the contrasted descriptions also have a set syllable pattern: the description of the boys uses two syllables per word in order to create a harsh, rough connotation, and the girl's description flows smoothly in each of the single syllable words. The next description incorporates the first usage of the mathematical metaphor/symbol, and contrasts the previous description of the girl, for her body is "hard and indivisible as a prime number," adding a independent nature to the character of the girl, and strengthening her role as a strong and feminist model for the beginning of adolescent maturity.…

    • 606 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    “April Morning” by Howard Fast is a novel that takes place during the Battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775. The entire book takes place during a 24 hour time period. Adam Cooper is the antagonist in this novel. When Adam goes to bed on the eve of April 18, 1775 he is a boy. When he awakens the next morning he is forced to become a man. In the early hours of the morning he, along with the rest of the town, is awakened by a lone rider racing to Lexington to warn them that a British army, of maybe a thousand men, is marching their way. Immediately the town is in a frenzy to prepare for the British arrival. The book is about Adam’s journey during the Battle of Lexington.…

    • 907 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    October sky In the novel October Sky by Homer Hickam the character, Homer is forced for many obstacles against all odds. Homer Hickam is a 15 yr old boy who wants to build rockets from a poor coal mining town he doesn't have support. He doesn't have the materials he needs. He needs to know how to build rockets. Homer Hickam had a lot of problems.…

    • 400 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In keeping with the speaker?s revengeful tone, the diction Prunty uses is related to these ideas of the old woman?s cruelty, because such words connote the speaker?s strong opinion of how horrible and low the old lady is. Rhyme, imagery, and point of view produce this effect. In the second stanza, the speaker describes the old woman?s viciousness in detail: She drove a loaded V8 poweglide And would have run you flat as paint To make the light before it turned on her, Make it as she watched you faint The ?loaded V8 powerglide? that the lady drove is a symbol of her viciousness. The word ?powerglide? gives the reader the sensation of a racecar while the word ?loaded? reminds the reader of a gun. In fact, she uses her car to purposefully scare or hurt people. She makes people ?flat as paint? or ?blown out like trash?(line 12). These similes show that she has no consideration for others. Later, in the third stanza, the metaphor of how she made you ?jaywalk to eternity? supported this idea. She did these things watching the pedestrians (?as she watched you faint?, ?eyes locking you down?(line 9)), which reveals that she inflicted pain on others purposefully. The onomatopoeia in the last stanza ?she?s done a million times before? supports this by saying that this type of behavior wasn?t an accident for her; it was a daily event. The final metaphor in the last stanza (?she?s a small tug on the tidal swell?) shows…

    • 823 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The structure in the poem illustrates the freedom of youth and playfulness. The poem is written in free verse to emphasize the significance of her as being free as she fantasizes about being unstoppable and not being ordinary. In lines 23 and 24, the enjambments are crucial to the whole liberal tone of the poem. Through the rhetorical question, “[c]an it be there was only one summer that I was ten?”…

    • 779 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The imagery in this poem is relating to the human body, like broken ribs and punctured lungs; and the mechanics of familiar objects. Also the poet is trying to point out that war created an unhappy life.…

    • 457 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Naked bodies provoke the curiosity in everybody, especially, in teenagers. After staring at such pictures, one could not stop thinking about them. The same feelings appear in the girl from the poem. She starts to imagine that it could be her in the picture. She thinks how exciting it would be to be naked and dance…The girl wants to have the same hair that will pile around her shoulders. She wishes her body were also perfect.…

    • 599 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The speaker of this poem is going through an identity crisis. They are dull and don’t see themselves having a personality. They see women in beautiful saris in the beginning of the poem and revel in how exotic and interesting they are or appear to be. Simultaneously they are conscious of their own bland way of life…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The main themes throughout this poem are love, hate and jealousy which eventually lead to death.…

    • 1939 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Emily Dickinson Diction

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages

    There is a multitude of poems written with the theme of death, be it in a positive light or negative. Some poets write poems that depict Death as a spine-chilling inevitable end, others hold respect for this natural occurrence. In Emily Dickinson’s poem “Because I could not stop for Death”, diction and personification is utilized to demonstrate the speaker’s cordial friendship with Death.…

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Poems Essay

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Poems, like stories and novels, often have themes and ideas that are expressed. In the two poems I read, de los Santos’ “Perfect Dress” and Hoagland’s “Beauty”, it is apparent that great thought was put into themes of beauty and into the ideas and opinions behind it. Through analyzation of these two poems I will collectively share the opinions and uncover perhaps previously unrealized perspectives that perhaps is not originally apparent…

    • 616 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Terra-Cotta Girl

    • 965 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The poem has clear, wide-open drama while managing ambiguity and open-endedness. A sort of modern local color piece tinted with Southern elements, it nevertheless makes its characters real and sympathetic, treats important themes that are both topical and general, and offers an apt objective relationship with universal implications.…

    • 965 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The slot is a metaphor of the "class cleavage of society". There was a contrast between the North and South of the Slot in terms of building types: in the North were the higher-class centers of diversion, lodging, and business; and in the South were the lower-class centers of lodging, unskilled work/business. The buildings are figures of two contrasting classes that were segregated (?). In order to study the southern people (the working class) a sociology professor of the University of CA, Freddie Drummond (FD), decides to work temporarily as an unskilled laborer. Initially he experiences social problems of adaptation and acceptance by his fellow workers. For example, he doesn't understand their insistent admonitions to reduce his work pace. As a result of his fierce competition against them, by the 6th day FD doubles his earnings. He misunderstands their lack of loyalty to the business, and looks down on them. Being unable to convince Drummond, and as a last resort, his co-workers jumped on him and attacked him so badly that he becomes ill. Once recovered, Drummond changes job. He finds himself working as a fruit-distributor among the women and decides not to change their work conditions. In six months, Drummond works at many jobs, and succeeds in imitating a genuine worker. As FD makes tentative generalizations about the working class, he is applauded by the business people, who divulge and spread his studies to the working class.…

    • 593 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This section shows the early stages of the poem of what Zack’s thoughts are on sex. In the end of this poem, he comes to a realisation that each time they have sex, it’s just an exploration to find out between love and sex. This sense of maturation and realisation of the individual is shown through the technique of David Levithan to write short stanzas to show the readers each step of Zack’s thought process and how he came to think that way. This short excerpt I chose highlights the beginnings of Zack and it plays a significant role to the whole poem as from the beginning we could detect how he has matured and changed the way thinks. Moreover David levithan names this poem “experimentation” as it captures what he is doing with Anne. This is stated as The poem embarks upon his realisation that he is doing these sexual experiments in order to find the balance between love and sex. Those are the critical poetic techniques that David Levithan have used in order to send the message across of the maturation in the teenage experience of…

    • 766 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays