SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 23
Half-Past Two
U.A. Fanthorpe
WHAT Half-Past Two
Poetry Anthology
Half-Past Two
This poem is about a young boy in school who has
committed an unknown offence and has to stay for
detention. Unfortunately, he cannot tell the time and
does not know when to leave.
There is an element of criticism of the education
system for punishing pupils for a lack of knowledge.
The boy becomes a symbol of the innocence of youth in
comparison to the harshness of adulthood.
U. A. Fanthorpe (Ursula Askham Fanthorpe)
U.A. Fanthorpe was born in Kent in 1929. After boarding school in Surrey, she read English at St. Anne’s College, Oxford,
before training as a teacher. She taught at Cheltenham Ladies' College for sixteen years and was Head of English for eight
before deciding to do something radically different. It was while working as a receptionist at a neurological hospital in 1974
that she started writing poetry.
In 1980 she won third prize in the massive Observer / Arvon / South Bank Show poetry competition judged by Charles
Causley, Seamus Heaney, Ted Hughes and Philip Larkin. She was awarded one of the two £1,000 Travelling Scholarships for
1983 by The Society of Authors. After various residencies (Lancaster 1983-85, Northern Arts Fellow, 1987) she left the
hospital in 1989 to pursue her poetry full-time.
In 1994 U.A. Fanthorpe was the first woman in 315 years to be nominated for the post of Professor of Poetry at Oxford.
In 2001 she was awarded the CBE for services to literature and awarded the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry in 2003, only the
fifth woman in 70 years to get it.
U.A. Fanthorpe died in 2009.
Half-past Two
Once upon a schooltime
He did Something Very Wrong
(I forget what it was).
And She said he’d done
Something Very Wrong, and must
Stay in the school-room till half-past two.
(Being cross, she’d forgotten
She hadn’t taught him Time.
He was too scared of being wicked to remind her.)
He knew a lot of time: he knew
Gettinguptime, timeyouwereofftime,
Timetogohomenowtime, Tvtime,
Timeformykisstime (that was Grantime).
All the important times he knew,
But not half-past two.
He knew the clockface, the little eyes
And two long legs for walking,
But he couldn’t click its language,
So he waited, beyond onceupona,
Out of reach of all the timefors,
And knew he’d escaped for ever
Into the smell of old chrysanthemums on Her desk,
Into the silent noise his hangnail made.
Into the air outside the window, into ever.
And then, My goodness, she said,
Scuttling in, I forgot all about you.
Run along or you’ll be late.
So she slotted him back into schooltime,
And he got home in time for teatime,
Nexttime, notimeforthatnowtime,
But he never forgot how once by not knowing time,
He escaped into the clockless land of ever,
Where time hides tick-less waiting to be born.
“Half-past Two”
Genre:
•Nostalgic, narrative poem
•Free verse
•Timeless in tone
Audience:
•Evokes memories of childhood
Subject:
•Child admonished
•Then forgotten
•Child’s experiences of non-
numerical time compared against his
compartmentalized view of the world
Purpose:
•To respect the childhood
experience?
Form and Structure
Tercets – Three line stanzas. A very rigid structure, like the ticking of a
clock.
Enjambment – Lines run into one another, like time passing easily and
steadily.
Symbolism and Imagery
Compound Words – Childish tone. Usually ending in ‘time’ to
emphasise that the boy knows what time is, but cannot tell time.
Onomatopoeia – ‘click its language’/‘slotted him back.’ Resembles the
sound the clock makes, as if time – or the speaker’s lack of ability to tell
time – is a problem for him every moment.
Symbolism and Imagery
Capitalisation – ‘Something Very Wrong’ emphasises
the innocence and youth of the speaker along with the
fear that he feels.
Personification – ‘the little eyes / And two long legs for
walking.’ Time and clocks are an alien concept to the
speaker. He is so familiar with them that they might as
well be unknown creatures.
Themes
Memory
Childhood
Isolation
Reality
Fanthorpe includes the boy’s memories of the day. The
narrator tells us that he goes to school and this is shown as a
compound word: ‘schooltime’. Fanthorpe uses capital letters
at the start of words to express how important and significant
the incident was to the teacher. The words ‘(I forgot what it
was)’ and the use of brackets show that it wasn’t all that
important to the boy.
Fanthorpe uses capital letters again in stanza 2 ‘She’ to give
the teacher a god-like status. Fanthorpe also uses repetition.
WHAT Half-Past Two Stanza 1 and 2
The narrator explains to us that the boy has not been
taught how to tell time yet. The childish nature of the
language also illustrates how irresponsible and innocent
the boy is.
In stanzas 4 and 5, the boy explains what he knows about
time and how he uses it. He has broken up his day into
recognisable units: ‘gettinguptime’.
WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 3, 4 and 5
In stanza 6, the boy explains how he interprets the clock. Fanthorpe
uses personification ‘long legs’ and ‘little eyes’ to again emphasise
the nature of childhood and innocence. The author reiterates that
‘he couldn’t click its language’ which shows that understanding time
is hard for him because it is like learning a new language.
In stanzas 7 and 8, the boy falls into the deep silence around him and
begins to admire his surroundings and falls into ‘daydreaming’- a
typical trait of a child. This could imply that adults are so obsessed
with work and time that they don’t appreciate life for its simplicity.
Childhood is the only time in life where time does not control you.
WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 6, 7 and 8
Stanza 9 reinforces the harsh attitude of an adult controlled by time
as she ‘forgot’ the boy was in the classroom. She feels no guilt or
remorse for her actions. This shows a complete distinction between
adulthood and childhood.
Stanza 10 and 11 summarises the boy’s day and how he fell into a
‘clockless’ land. This suggests that within the classroom, the boy felt
like he was in a different reality, a reality without responsibilities or
duties.
WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 9, 10 and 11
Verse 1: establishing time and voice
Once upon a schooltime
He did Something Very Wrong
(I forget what it was).
• How is the time established?
• With whom, or what, do you associate “once upon a…”?
• What is the purpose of the capital letters?
• Who is the “I” and why does (she) speak in brackets?
Verse 2: techniques
And She said he’d done
Something Very Wrong, and must
Stay in the school-room till half-past two.
• Who is the “She” character?
• Why no name for the teacher? Why capitals?
• Why lower case “he” for the boy?
• What is gained by using a simple 3 line stanza form?
Verse 3: the internal thoughts of both
(Being cross, she’d forgotten
She hadn’t taught him Time.
He was too scared of being wicked to remind her.)
• What is ‘voice’?
• “Cross; wicked” – whose language?
• What is the significance of the capitals?
• De-cipher the final line.
• Whose voice is this stanza in?
Verse 4: language and viewpoint
He knew a lot of time: he knew
Gettinguptime, timeyouwereofftime,
Timetogohomenowtime, Tvtime,
• What are these 4 “times” the boy knows?
• Why present them in these compound ways?
• Where does the final comma lead….?
Verse 5: non-numerical time
Timeformykisstime (that was Grantime).
All the important times he knew,
But not half-past two.
• To whom are these “time zones” relevant in the poem?
• So far, how does the poem show differences between the child and adult
experiences?
• Look ahead – what change occurs between this verse/section of the poem, and
the next?
• Subject of sympathy…or humiliation?
Verse 6: devices used?
He knew the clockface, the little eyes
And two long legs for walking,
But he couldn’t click its language,
• Find the: personification; figurative imagery; onomatopoeia
• Which voice are we in here?
• Note the change from conversation to poetic language. Is this sustained from
hereon in?
Verse 7: language and experience
So he waited, beyond onceupona,
Out of reach of all the timefors,
And knew he’d escaped for ever
• The run together words tell us what of the boy’s experience of time?
• Look up the technique “enjambment”: how does it operate in this verse; to what
effect?
Verse 8: escape into fantasy
Into the smell of old chrysanthemums on Her desk,
Into the silent noise his hangnail made.
Into the air outside the window, into ever.
• This is the final stanza of the middle section
• Why? What is so special about this one?
• What does the use of the following bring to the theme here:
• repetition (into)
• Sense of smell and sound (flowers and nail)
Verse 9: final section of poem
And then, My goodness, she said,
Scuttling in, I forgot all about you.
Run along or you’ll be late.
• Final section: how does the pace ‘change gear’?
• What is the poet trying to show by this?
• How is a change of voice achieved?
• Scuttling – what impression do you get from this verb?
Verse 10: a hybrid of times?
So she slotted him back into schooltime,
And he got home in time for teatime,
Nexttime, notimeforthatnowtime,
• Opens with conjunction “so”; second line with “and” The impact is…what?
• “slotted”: explain the image
• Is the teacher dismissive of him? Or simply efficient?
• Translate what the boy hears of the teacher into what she might well actually
have said.
Verse 11: euphoric profundity
But he never forgot how once by not knowing time,
He escaped into the clockless land of ever,
Where time hides tick-less waiting to be born.
• Text’s summation becomes gently profound
• “clockless land” = a fantasy image: how?
• Where is the personification in the final line?
• What impact has the boy been left with?
• Sense, and celebration, of momentary timelessness he gained – we all wish for
this, sometimes

More Related Content

What's hot

Dulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum estDulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum est
ChristineLYA
 
My Last Duchess
My Last DuchessMy Last Duchess
My Last Duchess
cbolsover
 
Ulysses by Alfred Tennyson
Ulysses by Alfred TennysonUlysses by Alfred Tennyson
Ulysses by Alfred Tennyson
Mohammed Raiyah
 

What's hot (20)

An Inspector Calls
An Inspector CallsAn Inspector Calls
An Inspector Calls
 
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
Anthem for doomed youth - Wilfred Owen
 
War photographer
War photographerWar photographer
War photographer
 
Themes in Tennessee Williams' 'A Streetcar named Desire'
Themes in Tennessee Williams' 'A Streetcar named Desire'Themes in Tennessee Williams' 'A Streetcar named Desire'
Themes in Tennessee Williams' 'A Streetcar named Desire'
 
Do not go gentle into that good night
Do not go gentle into that good nightDo not go gentle into that good night
Do not go gentle into that good night
 
Dulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum estDulce et decorum est
Dulce et decorum est
 
My Last Duchess
My Last DuchessMy Last Duchess
My Last Duchess
 
Out out
Out outOut out
Out out
 
My Last Duchess
My Last DuchessMy Last Duchess
My Last Duchess
 
Othello
OthelloOthello
Othello
 
The yellow wallpaper presentation
The yellow wallpaper presentationThe yellow wallpaper presentation
The yellow wallpaper presentation
 
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
W. B. Yeats, "The Second Coming"
 
Half caste-1
Half caste-1Half caste-1
Half caste-1
 
Power and Conflict Poetry
Power and Conflict PoetryPower and Conflict Poetry
Power and Conflict Poetry
 
The emigree
The emigreeThe emigree
The emigree
 
Charge of the light brigade
Charge of the light brigadeCharge of the light brigade
Charge of the light brigade
 
Prayer Before Birth
Prayer Before BirthPrayer Before Birth
Prayer Before Birth
 
Year 9 Poetry
Year 9 PoetryYear 9 Poetry
Year 9 Poetry
 
Waiting for godot
Waiting for godotWaiting for godot
Waiting for godot
 
Ulysses by Alfred Tennyson
Ulysses by Alfred TennysonUlysses by Alfred Tennyson
Ulysses by Alfred Tennyson
 

Similar to Half past two - U.A. Fanthorpe

Half past two by U. A Fanthorpe
Half past two by U. A FanthorpeHalf past two by U. A Fanthorpe
Half past two by U. A Fanthorpe
Toyin Akomolede
 
Eng half-past two
Eng   half-past twoEng   half-past two
Eng half-past two
_Mikhail_
 
Final version
Final versionFinal version
Final version
Inesala
 
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэнкурсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
Tsuntsaga Ch
 
Pop songs in the English class
Pop songs in the English classPop songs in the English class
Pop songs in the English class
Graciela Bilat
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
fabenglish
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
fabenglish
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
fabenglish
 
Final self study guide
Final self study guideFinal self study guide
Final self study guide
karlaralvizo
 

Similar to Half past two - U.A. Fanthorpe (20)

Half past two by U. A Fanthorpe
Half past two by U. A FanthorpeHalf past two by U. A Fanthorpe
Half past two by U. A Fanthorpe
 
Eng half-past two
Eng   half-past twoEng   half-past two
Eng half-past two
 
Choral Speaking Workshop for ESU PART 2
Choral Speaking Workshop for ESU PART 2Choral Speaking Workshop for ESU PART 2
Choral Speaking Workshop for ESU PART 2
 
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 2
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 2CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 2
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 2
 
ALL THE orlds a stage
ALL THE  orlds a stageALL THE  orlds a stage
ALL THE orlds a stage
 
All The Worlds A Stage
All The Worlds A StageAll The Worlds A Stage
All The Worlds A Stage
 
Final version
Final versionFinal version
Final version
 
week 1 day 1-intro.ppt
week 1 day 1-intro.pptweek 1 day 1-intro.ppt
week 1 day 1-intro.ppt
 
Form-Genres-Types- in Literature-Poetry.ppt
Form-Genres-Types- in Literature-Poetry.pptForm-Genres-Types- in Literature-Poetry.ppt
Form-Genres-Types- in Literature-Poetry.ppt
 
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэнкурсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
курсийн ажил бадамцэрэн
 
Mesopotamia Essay Conclusion
Mesopotamia Essay ConclusionMesopotamia Essay Conclusion
Mesopotamia Essay Conclusion
 
Pop songs in the English class
Pop songs in the English classPop songs in the English class
Pop songs in the English class
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
 
Choral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshopChoral speaking workshop
Choral speaking workshop
 
Talking about experiences and recent events
Talking about experiences and recent eventsTalking about experiences and recent events
Talking about experiences and recent events
 
The Call by Baberoon Gabeba
The Call by Baberoon GabebaThe Call by Baberoon Gabeba
The Call by Baberoon Gabeba
 
Voice and accent
Voice and accentVoice and accent
Voice and accent
 
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 1
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 1CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 1
CHORAL SPEAKING WORKSHOP ESU PART 1
 
Final self study guide
Final self study guideFinal self study guide
Final self study guide
 

More from npaliterature (16)

Telephone conversation
Telephone conversationTelephone conversation
Telephone conversation
 
Tyger
TygerTyger
Tyger
 
Sonnet 116
Sonnet 116Sonnet 116
Sonnet 116
 
La belle dame sans merci
La belle dame sans merciLa belle dame sans merci
La belle dame sans merci
 
Piano
PianoPiano
Piano
 
Remember
RememberRemember
Remember
 
Example quote analysis
Example quote analysisExample quote analysis
Example quote analysis
 
Once Upon a Time
Once Upon a TimeOnce Upon a Time
Once Upon a Time
 
A Mother in a Refugee Camp
A Mother in a Refugee CampA Mother in a Refugee Camp
A Mother in a Refugee Camp
 
Yr11 lit ao pie charts
Yr11 lit ao pie chartsYr11 lit ao pie charts
Yr11 lit ao pie charts
 
Poetry menu
Poetry menuPoetry menu
Poetry menu
 
If - Rudyard Kipling
If - Rudyard KiplingIf - Rudyard Kipling
If - Rudyard Kipling
 
Literature plc
Literature plcLiterature plc
Literature plc
 
AIC themes
AIC themesAIC themes
AIC themes
 
AIC characters
AIC charactersAIC characters
AIC characters
 
Omam themes
Omam themesOmam themes
Omam themes
 

Recently uploaded

Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
EADTU
 
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPSSpellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
AnaAcapella
 

Recently uploaded (20)

How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
 
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptxTowards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
 
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA! .
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA!                    .VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA!                    .
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA! .
 
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptxHMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
 
Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
Transparency, Recognition and the role of eSealing - Ildiko Mazar and Koen No...
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
 
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxWellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
 
Play hard learn harder: The Serious Business of Play
Play hard learn harder:  The Serious Business of PlayPlay hard learn harder:  The Serious Business of Play
Play hard learn harder: The Serious Business of Play
 
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptxHow to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
How to setup Pycharm environment for Odoo 17.pptx
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
 
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPSSpellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
Spellings Wk 4 and Wk 5 for Grade 4 at CAPS
 
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptxCOMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
COMMUNICATING NEGATIVE NEWS - APPROACHES .pptx
 
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdfFICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
 
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptxInterdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
 
What is 3 Way Matching Process in Odoo 17.pptx
What is 3 Way Matching Process in Odoo 17.pptxWhat is 3 Way Matching Process in Odoo 17.pptx
What is 3 Way Matching Process in Odoo 17.pptx
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
 
Introduction to TechSoup’s Digital Marketing Services and Use Cases
Introduction to TechSoup’s Digital Marketing  Services and Use CasesIntroduction to TechSoup’s Digital Marketing  Services and Use Cases
Introduction to TechSoup’s Digital Marketing Services and Use Cases
 
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
 

Half past two - U.A. Fanthorpe

  • 2. WHAT Half-Past Two Poetry Anthology Half-Past Two This poem is about a young boy in school who has committed an unknown offence and has to stay for detention. Unfortunately, he cannot tell the time and does not know when to leave. There is an element of criticism of the education system for punishing pupils for a lack of knowledge. The boy becomes a symbol of the innocence of youth in comparison to the harshness of adulthood.
  • 3. U. A. Fanthorpe (Ursula Askham Fanthorpe) U.A. Fanthorpe was born in Kent in 1929. After boarding school in Surrey, she read English at St. Anne’s College, Oxford, before training as a teacher. She taught at Cheltenham Ladies' College for sixteen years and was Head of English for eight before deciding to do something radically different. It was while working as a receptionist at a neurological hospital in 1974 that she started writing poetry. In 1980 she won third prize in the massive Observer / Arvon / South Bank Show poetry competition judged by Charles Causley, Seamus Heaney, Ted Hughes and Philip Larkin. She was awarded one of the two £1,000 Travelling Scholarships for 1983 by The Society of Authors. After various residencies (Lancaster 1983-85, Northern Arts Fellow, 1987) she left the hospital in 1989 to pursue her poetry full-time. In 1994 U.A. Fanthorpe was the first woman in 315 years to be nominated for the post of Professor of Poetry at Oxford. In 2001 she was awarded the CBE for services to literature and awarded the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry in 2003, only the fifth woman in 70 years to get it. U.A. Fanthorpe died in 2009.
  • 4. Half-past Two Once upon a schooltime He did Something Very Wrong (I forget what it was). And She said he’d done Something Very Wrong, and must Stay in the school-room till half-past two. (Being cross, she’d forgotten She hadn’t taught him Time. He was too scared of being wicked to remind her.) He knew a lot of time: he knew Gettinguptime, timeyouwereofftime, Timetogohomenowtime, Tvtime, Timeformykisstime (that was Grantime). All the important times he knew, But not half-past two. He knew the clockface, the little eyes And two long legs for walking, But he couldn’t click its language, So he waited, beyond onceupona, Out of reach of all the timefors, And knew he’d escaped for ever Into the smell of old chrysanthemums on Her desk, Into the silent noise his hangnail made. Into the air outside the window, into ever. And then, My goodness, she said, Scuttling in, I forgot all about you. Run along or you’ll be late. So she slotted him back into schooltime, And he got home in time for teatime, Nexttime, notimeforthatnowtime, But he never forgot how once by not knowing time, He escaped into the clockless land of ever, Where time hides tick-less waiting to be born. “Half-past Two” Genre: •Nostalgic, narrative poem •Free verse •Timeless in tone Audience: •Evokes memories of childhood Subject: •Child admonished •Then forgotten •Child’s experiences of non- numerical time compared against his compartmentalized view of the world Purpose: •To respect the childhood experience?
  • 5. Form and Structure Tercets – Three line stanzas. A very rigid structure, like the ticking of a clock. Enjambment – Lines run into one another, like time passing easily and steadily.
  • 6. Symbolism and Imagery Compound Words – Childish tone. Usually ending in ‘time’ to emphasise that the boy knows what time is, but cannot tell time. Onomatopoeia – ‘click its language’/‘slotted him back.’ Resembles the sound the clock makes, as if time – or the speaker’s lack of ability to tell time – is a problem for him every moment.
  • 7. Symbolism and Imagery Capitalisation – ‘Something Very Wrong’ emphasises the innocence and youth of the speaker along with the fear that he feels. Personification – ‘the little eyes / And two long legs for walking.’ Time and clocks are an alien concept to the speaker. He is so familiar with them that they might as well be unknown creatures.
  • 9. Fanthorpe includes the boy’s memories of the day. The narrator tells us that he goes to school and this is shown as a compound word: ‘schooltime’. Fanthorpe uses capital letters at the start of words to express how important and significant the incident was to the teacher. The words ‘(I forgot what it was)’ and the use of brackets show that it wasn’t all that important to the boy. Fanthorpe uses capital letters again in stanza 2 ‘She’ to give the teacher a god-like status. Fanthorpe also uses repetition. WHAT Half-Past Two Stanza 1 and 2
  • 10. The narrator explains to us that the boy has not been taught how to tell time yet. The childish nature of the language also illustrates how irresponsible and innocent the boy is. In stanzas 4 and 5, the boy explains what he knows about time and how he uses it. He has broken up his day into recognisable units: ‘gettinguptime’. WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 3, 4 and 5
  • 11. In stanza 6, the boy explains how he interprets the clock. Fanthorpe uses personification ‘long legs’ and ‘little eyes’ to again emphasise the nature of childhood and innocence. The author reiterates that ‘he couldn’t click its language’ which shows that understanding time is hard for him because it is like learning a new language. In stanzas 7 and 8, the boy falls into the deep silence around him and begins to admire his surroundings and falls into ‘daydreaming’- a typical trait of a child. This could imply that adults are so obsessed with work and time that they don’t appreciate life for its simplicity. Childhood is the only time in life where time does not control you. WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 6, 7 and 8
  • 12. Stanza 9 reinforces the harsh attitude of an adult controlled by time as she ‘forgot’ the boy was in the classroom. She feels no guilt or remorse for her actions. This shows a complete distinction between adulthood and childhood. Stanza 10 and 11 summarises the boy’s day and how he fell into a ‘clockless’ land. This suggests that within the classroom, the boy felt like he was in a different reality, a reality without responsibilities or duties. WHAT Half-Past Two Stanzas 9, 10 and 11
  • 13. Verse 1: establishing time and voice Once upon a schooltime He did Something Very Wrong (I forget what it was). • How is the time established? • With whom, or what, do you associate “once upon a…”? • What is the purpose of the capital letters? • Who is the “I” and why does (she) speak in brackets?
  • 14. Verse 2: techniques And She said he’d done Something Very Wrong, and must Stay in the school-room till half-past two. • Who is the “She” character? • Why no name for the teacher? Why capitals? • Why lower case “he” for the boy? • What is gained by using a simple 3 line stanza form?
  • 15. Verse 3: the internal thoughts of both (Being cross, she’d forgotten She hadn’t taught him Time. He was too scared of being wicked to remind her.) • What is ‘voice’? • “Cross; wicked” – whose language? • What is the significance of the capitals? • De-cipher the final line. • Whose voice is this stanza in?
  • 16. Verse 4: language and viewpoint He knew a lot of time: he knew Gettinguptime, timeyouwereofftime, Timetogohomenowtime, Tvtime, • What are these 4 “times” the boy knows? • Why present them in these compound ways? • Where does the final comma lead….?
  • 17. Verse 5: non-numerical time Timeformykisstime (that was Grantime). All the important times he knew, But not half-past two. • To whom are these “time zones” relevant in the poem? • So far, how does the poem show differences between the child and adult experiences? • Look ahead – what change occurs between this verse/section of the poem, and the next? • Subject of sympathy…or humiliation?
  • 18. Verse 6: devices used? He knew the clockface, the little eyes And two long legs for walking, But he couldn’t click its language, • Find the: personification; figurative imagery; onomatopoeia • Which voice are we in here? • Note the change from conversation to poetic language. Is this sustained from hereon in?
  • 19. Verse 7: language and experience So he waited, beyond onceupona, Out of reach of all the timefors, And knew he’d escaped for ever • The run together words tell us what of the boy’s experience of time? • Look up the technique “enjambment”: how does it operate in this verse; to what effect?
  • 20. Verse 8: escape into fantasy Into the smell of old chrysanthemums on Her desk, Into the silent noise his hangnail made. Into the air outside the window, into ever. • This is the final stanza of the middle section • Why? What is so special about this one? • What does the use of the following bring to the theme here: • repetition (into) • Sense of smell and sound (flowers and nail)
  • 21. Verse 9: final section of poem And then, My goodness, she said, Scuttling in, I forgot all about you. Run along or you’ll be late. • Final section: how does the pace ‘change gear’? • What is the poet trying to show by this? • How is a change of voice achieved? • Scuttling – what impression do you get from this verb?
  • 22. Verse 10: a hybrid of times? So she slotted him back into schooltime, And he got home in time for teatime, Nexttime, notimeforthatnowtime, • Opens with conjunction “so”; second line with “and” The impact is…what? • “slotted”: explain the image • Is the teacher dismissive of him? Or simply efficient? • Translate what the boy hears of the teacher into what she might well actually have said.
  • 23. Verse 11: euphoric profundity But he never forgot how once by not knowing time, He escaped into the clockless land of ever, Where time hides tick-less waiting to be born. • Text’s summation becomes gently profound • “clockless land” = a fantasy image: how? • Where is the personification in the final line? • What impact has the boy been left with? • Sense, and celebration, of momentary timelessness he gained – we all wish for this, sometimes