The Children's Hour

The Children's Hour Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

The Father (Longfellow)

Form and Meter

Quatrains; Irregular trochaic trimeter

Metaphors and Similes

Metaphor:
-Longfellow uses a metaphor of a raid on his castle to describe the girls coming into his study and attacking him; he says he will hold them in the fortress of his heart until the walls crumble.

Alliteration and Assonance

Alliteration:
-"voices soft and sweet"
-"I have you fast in my fortress"
-"they are plotting and planning together"

Irony

-With the title of the poem being “The Children’s Hour” it would be an easy conclusion to make that the beneficiaries of such an hour would be the children. Indeed, the girls have a lovely, playful time with their father. It is the father, though, who ironically benefits most. He gets a respite from his work and gets to be fully present with his children. He senses the ephemerality of these moments and thus cherishes them all the more.

Genre

Poetry

Setting

A father's study in the evening; 19th century antebellum America

Tone

Loving, warm, playful, intimate

Protagonist and Antagonist

None

Major Conflict

The "conflict" of the poem is a lighthearted one: whether or not the father will play along with the silliness of his daughters when they rush into his study.

Climax

When the girls actually rush in and surround him after the build-up of whispering and plotting.

Foreshadowing

The sounds of feet and whispering give us the sense that there will be a rush of action to come; the father will be disturbed in his study.

Understatement

n/a

Allusions

-"Bishop Bingen in the Mouse Tower" refers to the Archbishop of Bingen, a cruel ruler who was supposedly eaten alive by mice in this tower on a small island outside the little German town.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

Synecdoche:
-"old mustache" is the father

Personification

-"the night is beginning to lower"

Hyperbole

-"They seem to be everywhere"
-"And there will I keep you forever"

Onomatopoeia

-"rush"
-"whisper"
-"patter"

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