Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View
The poem A Warning to Children is narrated from a third person omniscient point of view.
Form and Meter
Iambic Pentameter
Metaphors and Similes
There are no metaphors or similes in the poem.
Alliteration and Assonance
In line 5, we have ‘’ You live, you think of things like this:” which can be considers as being an alliteration since the sound ‘’th’’ is repeated three times in the same line.
Irony
The way the author talks about the parcel is quite ironic because in the beginning, he seems to want the children to open the parcel. He describes it and then he talks about how a person can reach it. At the end of the poem however, the poet reveals that if one decides to open the parcel, that person will have to suffer dire consequences.
Genre
Poem
Setting
The setting is hard to determine since the poem takes place in a fantasy land. Because of this, it is impossible to determine a certain time frame and place where we can place the action of the poem.
Tone
Playful, cheerful, simple
Protagonist and Antagonist
The protagonists in the poem can be considered as being the children the poet addresses and the antagonists is more abstract and it can be considered as being the children’s curiosity, an impulse they cannot control.
Major Conflict
The major conflict seems to be an internal one and is the result of the children’s desire to untie the parcel and the knowledge that by untying the parcel they will release something they will not understand.
Climax
The climax of the poem is a hypothetical one as there is no assurance that it happened. However, the poet talks about the moment the string is untied and the action represents the climax if the poem.
Foreshadowing
Since A warning to children is a poem, no statements that can be considered as foreshadowing other future events could be found.
Understatement
N/A
Allusions
There is an allusion made to the Biblical story of Adam and Eve in the poem. The poet mentions the presence of a tree with a husky fruit in it and the tree and the fruit may be the same ones mentioned in the book of Genesis in the Bible. Just like in the Bible, the children believed that by discovering the secrets of the fruit, they will become better people. However, the opposite happened and the children were punished for their deeds by becoming enclosed in the parcel they were trying to untie.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
There are no metonymies or synecdoche used in the poem.
Personification
In line 14, ‘’a husky fruit’’.
Hyperbole
There are no structures that can be categorized as being hyperboles in the poem.
Onomatopoeia
There are no words in the poem that could be considered as being onomatopoeia.