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Topic 3 (session B) - Patterns, Deviations, Style and Meaning > Parallelism, deviation & 'The Brain - is wider than the Sky -' > Task C - grammatical parallelism |
Session Overview |
Extended parallelism: non-literary examples |
Extended parallelism: literary examples |
Parallelism, deviation and 'The brain - is wider than the sky -' |
Foregrounding Checksheet |
Topic 3 'tool' summary |
Useful Links |
Readings |
Parallelism, deviation and 'The Brain - is wider than the Sky -'Task C - Grammatical ParallelismEach stanza is a sentence. Analyse each sentence to reveal the grammatical parallelism and deviations from it, and explain how the parallelism and deviations work. Because the three stanzas are closely parallel it will be sensible to look at stanza 1 in detail and then compare stanza 2 with it, noting the similarities and differences. Finally, repeat the process with stanza 3. You may find that you have some difficulties in the fine detail of this analysis. This is because (a) you may need to look forward to the linking, listing and nesting page in order to cope with the grammatical subordination in each stanza and (b) because, although fairly simple, in some ways the poem contains a couple of interesting grammatical conundrums (grammarians find them interesting, anyway!). For the moment, just trust your instincts and don't worry if you make the odd mistake. Our commentary will help solve the puzzles for you, hopefully, and the most important thing is to get involved in the analysis so that you can 'feel' the issues and how to solve them. It is also worth bearing in mind that, even if you understand English grammar pretty well, real texts are always a bit more tricky to deal with than grammarians' example sentences, which are usually straightforward, to help you understand the basic point. Don't be put off. Even the experts get confused! Once your happy with your response[s], use the following link[s] to compare your answer[s] with ours: Our analysis of Stanza 1Below we give our overall grammatical analysis for stanza 1. But before we do that, let's outline some of the 'tricky problems' in the first stanza:
Here is our analysis of the first sentence/stanza: Overall the stanza is one whole sentence with a rather complex Adverbial (an embedded adverbial clause with another adverbial clause embedded inside it. Is has the following overall structure. Note how the odd relation between the brain and 'You' in the last stanza is foregrounded by its odd 'second object' connection to the predicator 'contain'. This is achieved by a deviant, and thus foregrounded grammatical construction, involving putting the first of the two coordinated noun phrase objects to 'put' before the predicator, and placing the other one after the predicator, and separated from it by 'with ease'. Another way of providing the same overall information (and which uses less space but is less detailed and is probably not as clear) would be to use brackets and labels '[ ]' to show the main clause boundaries and '( )', the subordinate clause boundaries:
Our analysis of Stanza 2We won't bother to diagram out stanza 2 because its overall structure is roughly the same as stanza 1 - SPCA-(A)-A. Indeed, the first three lines of the stanza are identical structurally and only 5 words have been changed:
Then, in the last line of the first stanza, we get an adverbial phrase, a second object and another adverbial completing the clause started in line 3 (or, more accurately, with the 'For' at the beginning of line 2). In the second stanza we also get an adverbial, but this time an adverbial clause with a rather unusual order 'As Sponges - Buckets do'. This structure, with the 'dummy verb' 'do' replacing 'absorb' and being moved to the end of the clause, juxtaposes 'sponges' and 'buckets' helping to increase the strikingness of the line which we talked about when discussing semantic relations in the poem. The clear overarching grammatical parallelism between the two stanzas (and the repetition of 'brain' and most of the closed class (grammatical) words) results in an extended parallelism between the two stanzas, inviting us to see the content of the stanzas as equivalent. This reinforces the set of semantic parallels already mentioned when we looked at the semantic structure of the poem. Our analysis of Stanza 3As with the semantic level analysis we have already completed, what we find here is that there is some degree of parallelism but the pattern set up in the first two stanzas is broken in various significant ways. The first two lines have the same grammatical structure except that, significantly, the comparative structure is replaced by an equative one (and one which is made very clear by the addition of the word 'just'). This equative structure, in turn, leads to more significant changes in the last two lines. The transitive structure involving the process of one thing being included in the other is replaced by an intransitive structure saying that they will differ in the way that syllable and sound differ (i.e. not much). Moreover, an extra conditional adverbial clause 'if they do' is included, which suggests that the difference just suggested may turn out not to exist anyway. So again the grammatical patterning reinforces what we have already seen at the semantic level.
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