大象传媒

Winter Swans by Owen Sheers - AQAOverview

In Winter Swans, a couple鈥檚 love is confirmed by the sight of swans on a lake. Content, ideas, language and structure are explored. Comparisons and alternative interpretations are also considered.

Part of English LiteraturePoems

Overview

A reading of 鈥榃inter Swans鈥

A couple are walking through the 'gulping' mud alongside a lake in winter. They are 'silent and apart' and the reader feels as if the previous 'two days of rain' might have coincided with an argument between the pair. They appear distant.

When the swans arrive, the pair stop to watch the birds and their 'show of tipping in unison鈥. The birds are compared to icebergs and 'boats righting in rough weather'. They might be seen as reflecting the relationship between the couple, who are also on the verge of 'righting' their relationship after a difficult patch.

The speaker's partner comments that the birds 'mate for life' and this observation seems to remind the pair that they have done the same. Where the first half of the poem refers to storms and darkness, we now have a mention of 'light', implying a positive turn for the relationship.

By the end, their hands have 鈥榮wum the distance between鈥 them and folded 鈥榣ike a pair of wings鈥, implying that their differences are now reconciled.

Compare 鈥榃inter Swans鈥 and 鈥楴eutral Tones鈥 in this podcast

In this episode, Testament and Owen Sheers discuss the poems 鈥榃inter Swans鈥 by Owen Sheers and 鈥楴eutral Tones鈥 by Thomas Hardy.