The document provides activities and instructions for students to analyze a poem titled "Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead" by Alfred Lord Tennyson. The activities guide students through pre-reading, while-reading, and post-reading stages. They include identifying the title's meaning, paraphrasing the poem, noting vocabulary, thinking about the poem's imagery and themes, and creating a new poem with a changed perspective from the original. The goal is for students to understand and reflect on the meaning of the poem through active reading strategies.
2. Objectives:
To understand and apply acting reading strategies for comprehension poetry.
To reflex about the meaning of the poem.
Poetry Analysis—TP-CASTT.doc
T Title When I read the title I think in a tragedy.
Some people brought a warrior to her home
When she saw him she didn’t swoon neither cry:
All the maidens that were watching her, said,
If she doesn’t sweep she will die.
The dead warrior was praised soft and low by the people,
The warrior deserved to be loved,
He was the most reliable friend and honest enemy;
She couldn’t speak and move.
P Paraphrase
He stole the maiden who was in her place,
And she walked towards the warrior,
She took the face-cloth from his face;
But she couldn’t move or wept.
A nurse that was 90 years old called Rose,
Put her child upon her knee
Her tears fell from her eyes as the summer tempest
My sweet child, I live for you.
“She nor swooned, nor uttered cry”
When she saw the dead warrior in her home she couldn’t believe what was
happening. She was astonished and she had no reactions because of the
situation.
“Then they praised him, soft and low”
C Connotation It lets us see that the warrior died for a noble cause and the people admired him.
He died like a hero.
“Sweet my child, I live for thee.”
Here we can see that the nurse was worried about the situation because
mother’s child was puzzled and his father was dead. Then she meant that she will
take care about the child.
A Attitude The poet lets us see different attitudes of people when you lost someone.
S Shifts
“Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead”
T Title In the title the author represents a man who has dead and was brought to his
wife in her home.
T Theme Nobody is prepared to have a tragedy in the family, it is always unexpected,
mainly when a person die suddenly.
3. Pre-reading
Acitvity 1:
The students have to read the title of the poem, interpret this picture and answer:
What do you think the poem is going to be
about?
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Activity 2:
Think Aloud:
Students have to think about this new experience reading poetry, giving their opinions
and thoughts about the poem.
What do you think when you read a new poem? How do you feel? Have you ever had
another experience reading poetry?
Activity 3:
K-W-L (Know-Want to know-Learned)
In this chart, students will write about what they already know about poetry (structure,
concepts, etc.), what they expected to learn reading poetry (vocabulary, how to write a
poem, etc.) and the new things that they learned during the pre-reading process.
Know Want to know Learned
4. While-reading
Activity 4:
Read the text.
Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead
Home they brought her warrior dead:
She nor swooned, nor uttered cry:
All her maidens, watching, said,
‘She must weep or she will die.’
Then they praised him, soft and low,
Called him worthy to be loved,
Truest friend and noblest foe;
Yet she neither spoke nor moved.
Stole a maiden from her place,
Lightly to the warrior stepped,
Took the face-cloth from the face;
Yet she neither moved nor wept.
Rose a nurse of ninety years,
Set his child upon her knee—
Like summer tempest came her tears—
‘Sweet my child, I live for thee.’
Alfred Lord Tennyson
5. Activity 5:
Students will have to identify vocabulary with definitions and images.
Put the correct number with the corresponding definition.
Swoon A young woman who hasn’t lost her
1 purity.
Maiden Literary faint, especially from extreme
2 emotion.
Weep A brave or experienced person or
3 soldier.
Praised Shed tears.
4
Warrior Express respect and gratitude towards
5 (a deity)
6. Activity 6:
The students will have to listen to the poem that will be listened from a native speaker (It
will be in a listening). After that no more than 2 students will have o read it aloud in front
of the class.
LISTEN Read the poem aloud. Breathe when there is punctuation. Note the rhythm
and how it affects mood.
SENSE Imagine the sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and sense of touch within the
poem.
REACT Note your reactions to the poem and the connections you make to other
things you’ve read or done.
QUESTION Note the questions the poem raises. Ask yourself what it is about, what
words or phrases mean.
CLARIFY Summarize or paraphrase. Find the meaning of symbolic language.
Activity 7:
After that the students will have to imagine the sights, sounds, smells, etc. and they will
have to take notes of the reactions and connect it with some things that they have read or
lived before. Then students share information with a partner and no more than a couple
of student must to share it in front of the class.
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7. Activity 8:
Students will note the questions that the poem raises and ask to themselves and answer
the next questions:
1. ¿What is the poem about?
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2. ¿What words and phrases that appear into the poem mean? (Note what you didn’t
understand and interpret it with your own words).
For example: “She nor swooned, nor uttered cry” it may mean: She couldn’t believed
what was happening and for that reason she couldn’t react.
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Activity 9:
Students will have to paraphrase the poem with their own words. Before, the teacher will
explain what is paraphrase.
“A paraphrase is a passage borrowed from a source and rewritten
in your own words. A paraphrase should be true to the original
author’s idea, but is rewritten in your own words and sentence
structure. Since you are using someone else’s ideas and expressing
them in your own words, it is very important to give credit to the
source of the idea.
A paraphrase should not use any of the original author’s words
except incidental conjunctions and common prepositions”.
8. Original Poem Paraphrasing
Home They Brought Her Warrior
Dead
Home they brought her warrior
dead:
She nor swooned, nor uttered cry:
All her maidens, watching, said,
‘She must weep or she will die.’
Then they praised him, soft and low,
Called him worthy to be loved,
Truest friend and noblest foe;
Yet she neither spoke nor moved.
Stole a maiden from her place,
Lightly to the warrior stepped,
Took the face-cloth from the face;
Yet she neither moved nor wept.
Rose a nurse of ninety years,
Set his child upon her knee—
Like summer tempest came her
tears—
‘Sweet my child, I live for thee.’
Alfred Lord Tennyson
9. Post-reading
Activity 10:
The students will have to create a poem changing the sense of this poem, doing the
contrary of the poem. For example: “Home they brought her warrior dead” will be “Home
they brought her warrior alive”. Convert the tragedy that is presented in the poem, in
happiness.
“Home they brought her warrior alive”.
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Activity 11:
1) Rereading. Students read the poem again to a complete understanding.
2) Interpret the title: Connect the title to the meaning.
3) Connect text-to-self (how the student feel when he read the poem and what is the
meaning that he gives to the poem). Discuss and share opinions about it.
4) K-W-L chart
Know Want to know Learned