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What life is really like - Beverly Rycroft - Full summary £2.70   Add to cart

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What life is really like - Beverly Rycroft - Full summary

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An excellent summary to study your poems for this exam.

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  • August 10, 2023
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  • 2023/2024
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What life is really like - Beverly Rycroft




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, What life is really like - Beverly Rycroft


R Line Analysis
Stanza 1
 Told in first person narrator.
 The poem starts with and instruction from a father to his young daughter, ‘You need to toughen up,’ but the girl
experiences it as if he is complaining about her innocence.
 The father is implying that the child needs to get used to the real experiences in life in line 8 (‘what life is really
like’) which implies that she does not yet understand the intricacies of life.
 Furthermore, ‘really’ in line 8 is printed in bold, emphasising how important his message is.
1 You need to toughen up .”to toughen up”: to become hardened to the ways of the world, and to
be less emotional when dealing with pain and suffering.
 “you “: The speaker's father is advising them to become stronger and
more resilient.
 Imperative: "You need to toughen up,"
Explanation: These lines express commands or strong
suggestions, emphasizing the speaker's father's authoritative tone and
his belief that the speaker needs to become stronger and more
resilient.
2 my father would complain  “Complain”: express dissatisfaction or annoyance about something.
 “my “: The speaker's father often expressed his dissatisfaction or
disappointment.
3 when I was small  ´I “: This indicates that the speaker's father's remarks about
toughness started when the speaker was young.
4 I ought to take you to see  “ought”: This suggests that he doesn’t ever take her to witness the
death of chickens.
5 chickens having their head  The father seems cruel, but underneath the gruffness is a gentle love
for his daughter.
6 chopped off.  Chickens where beheaded.
7 That’d teach you  The purpose of the suggested experience is to impart a lesson or
teach a valuable insight.
 Imperative: "That'd teach you,"
Explanation: These lines express commands or strong
suggestions, emphasizing the speaker's father's authoritative tone and
his belief that the speaker needs to become stronger and more
resilient.
8 what life is really like.  The father believes that witnessing the brutality of beheading chickens
would provide a realistic understanding of life's harshness.
Stanza 2
 The child explains how the father uses another real-life situation to teach her about the cruelty of life by forcing
her to assist when he stitches up an injured pigeon.
9 He’d seek me out  Personification: ‘when one of his pigeons/-crazed for home or/mad
with terror’ The pigeon is described like a crazy or mad person. It is
effective because the poet successfully emphasises how unsettled the
pigeon was.
The father actively looked for the speaker.




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