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Midterm Break

The poem describes the emotional turmoil experienced by a speaker after losing a loved one in a tragic accident. It focuses on the aftermath, with the speaker's family in grief and strangers attempting to offer condolences. Through imagery and details revealed at the end, the reader learns it was the speaker's young brother who was killed in a car accident.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
301 views5 pages

Midterm Break

The poem describes the emotional turmoil experienced by a speaker after losing a loved one in a tragic accident. It focuses on the aftermath, with the speaker's family in grief and strangers attempting to offer condolences. Through imagery and details revealed at the end, the reader learns it was the speaker's young brother who was killed in a car accident.

Uploaded by

nonjabs1
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

‘Mid-Term Break’ -Seamus Heaney

This poem describes the emotional turmoil experienced by a speaker who has lost a loved one
in a traumatic way.

The poem begins with the speaker stating that he is being quarantined within a “sick bay” of
his college. It is here he waited for his neighbours to come and pick him up and take him
home. The boy has suffered a loss, one which does not become clear until the final line of the
poem.

He travels home and is met by his suffering family. His father is crying, and his mother is
unable to even speak. There are many strangers around attempting to sympathize with the
family, but their efforts appear awkward and are often unwanted.

The body arrives via ambulance the next day and the boy takes a look at it when he is alone
one morning. There are no great injuries that he can see but he knows this is due to the fact
that this person was thrown by the bumper of a car. The final line states that the coffin will
only be four feet long, the same length as the child’s age, making clear to the reader that the
speaker has lost his young brother in a terrible accident.

Themes

In ‘Mid-Term Break’ Heaney engages with themes of loss and grief. It focuses on the
aftermath of the car accident that killed Heaney’s younger brother. The accident is in the
background of how everyone around Heaney responds. There is anger, pure sorrow, and
detachment that he observes in his family members. The death threw off the family dynamic
and shifted the way that everyone responded to everyday events. Gender roles shift, and the
reader is left to contend with their own ideas of what grief looks like and how it can change
one’s life.

Structure and Form

‘Mid-Term Break’ by Seamus Heaney is a seven stanza poem that is made up of sets of three
lines, or tercets. These tercets remain consistent throughout the poem until the reader comes
to the final line. This line is separate from the preceding stanzas and acts as a point of
summary for the entire piece. ‘Mid-Term Break’ does not follow a specific rhyme scheme,
but is still unified through the similar line lengths and the moments of the half and
full rhymes that exist throughout its text.

Literary Devices

Heaney makes use of several literary devices in ‘Mid-Term Break.’ These include but are not
limited to alliteration, enjambment, caesura, and imagery. The latter is one of the most
important techniques a poet can make use of in their work. Without imagery, the reader will
likely leave the poem unaffected by what they’ve read. For example, these lines from the first
stanza: “Counting bells knelling classes to a close. / At two o’clock our neighbours drove me
home.”

Alliteration is seen quite clearly in the first stanza in which the poet uses a number of words
that start with a “c” sound. These include, “college,” “counting,” classes,” “clock,” and
“close,” all within three lines.

Caesura and enjambment are formal devices that impact the way readers understand the lines.
Enjambment is concerned with line breaks while caesura is focused on pauses in the middle
of lines. For example, the last line of the poem reads: “A four-foot box, a foot for every
year.” There are several examples of enjambment as well. For instance,
the transition between lines one and two of stanza six as well as line three of stanza four and
line one of stanza five.

Analysis of Mid-Term Break

Lines 1-3

I sat all morning in the college sick bay


(…)
At two o’clock our neighbours drove me home.

The poem begins with the speaker stating that he has been trapped within a “sick bay” of his
college medical center for the entire morning. One might initially think that this is due to an
illness that the speaker has contracted, something that requires he be kept separate from the
rest of the student body. This is and isn’t the case. As the reader will learn in the following
stanzas, the speaker has lost someone very close to him and the “sick bay” is where he is
made to wait for his “neighbours” to drive him home.

The poet has chosen to emphasize the alienating impact that loss has on someone by keeping
the speaker separate from any friends or colleagues he might have in the school. He is made
to suffer alone so no one has to see what he is going through.

While waiting, he knows the school day is going on outside the wall of the office. He can
hear the bells ringing and understands that it is “two o’clock” before anyone comes to get
him. The depth of his loss is made clear by the fact that it is not a family member who
retrieves him, but the neighbours.

Lines 4-6

In the porch I met my father crying—


(…)
And Big Jim Evans saying it was a hard blow.

In the second stanza, the speaker has arrived home and the first thing he sees is his father on
the porch crying. This is a shocking sight, as in the past, when they have attended funerals
before, the father has always “taken [them] in his stride.” He has never been very moved, at
least on the outside, by death. But there is something different about this loss.

A neighbour, named “Big Jim Evans,” comes up to the speaker and tells him that this loss
was a “hard blow” on the speaker’s father.

Lines 7-9

The baby cooed and laughed and rocked the pram


(…)
By old men standing up to shake my hand

He is now inside the house and with his closest relations. There is a baby in the room,
blissfully unaware of the mourning going on around it. It is there, “cooing” in it’s “pram.”
The men in the room, associates of his father’s and friends of the family, stand up and “shake
[his] hand” when he comes into the house. He is caught off guard and embarrassed by this
action. He does not know how to respond to it. At this point, the reader still does not know
who it is that the speaker has lost.

Lines 10-12

And tell me they were ‘sorry for my trouble’.


(…)
Away at school, as my mother held my hand

In the fourth stanza, it is made clear that it is not his mother who has died, as she is there
holding his hand as all the strangers speak to him. Endless numbers line up and tell him how
sorry they are for his “trouble.” Even here, at this funeral, the men and women are unable to
confront what has happened. It is “trouble” that has occurred, rather than the death of a loved
one, or important loss.

The strangers are all around the small family. The young speaker is able to hear them telling
one another that he is the “eldest child” who was “away at school” when whatever happened,
happened.

Lines 13-15

In hers and coughed out angry tearless sighs.


(…)
With the corpse, stanched and bandaged by the nurses.

The mother is still holding her son’s hand. She is unable to express herself, all she can
manage is coughing out “angry tearless sighs.” The loss is too great for real meaningful
words.

Finally, the ambulance arrives. An amount of time has passed since the boy first learned of
this loss and the corpse has been processed. It has been “stanched and bandaged by the
nurses.” It is no longer bleeding, and all serious wounds have been covered.
Lines 16-18

Next morning I went up into the room. Snowdrops


(…)
For the first time in six weeks. Paler now,

In the second to last stanza, the speaker is finally able to confront the body. He goes up to the
room in which the body is kept the “Next morning” and sees the “Snowdrops / And candles”
beside the bed. It is a peaceful scene, one of meditation and quiet contemplation.

This is the first time the boy has seen this person in “six weeks.” It is unclear how long it has
been since the accident that killed this loved one, but the boy has been away at school for
quite some time.

Lines 19-22

Wearing a poppy bruise on his left temple,


(…)
A four-foot box, a foot for every year.

In the final stanza, and in the hanging the last line, the identity of the person is finally
revealed. First, the speaker gives some details regarding the state of the body. There is a red,
“poppy” coloured bruise on the side of the person’s head, but other than that there are no
“gaudy scars” that would tell of what happened in the accident.

In the next phrase, it is revealed that the body is in such a state because the “bumper knocked
him clear” of the greater accident. Whoever this person was, they died from the impact of a
car.

The final line is that which makes clear the person’s identity. The body belongs to the
speaker’s brother, who was only four years old when he was killed. His body rests in a box
that is suited for his age and size. It is only four feet long, the same length as the years he
lived on the earth.

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