The Policeman’s Daughter;Young Poet;Eleanor Dix
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The Policeman’s Daughter;Young Poet;Eleanor Dix
https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/policemans-daughteryoung-poeteleanor-dix
It’s a very controlled piece, almost flat-sounding, but pulled back from this by the clever use of line-breaks, which seem to hesitate, reflecting, perhaps, the speaker’s desire to please. Why else would she not want to dirty a dress she doesn’t like? The line “Perfection is vital” speaks volumes about this father-daughter relationship and all its power struggles.
I also want to praise the two single-word lines. Feeling “alone” and “angry” are what the poem is, finally, about. I like the fact that they alliterate and that they are spaced nine lines into the poem, and nine lines from the middle. It’s this sense of neatness, both in subject matter and in form, which makes the poem so powerful.
THE POLICEMAN’S DAUGHTER.
My father is a policeman.
Pillar of the community.
People nod and smile as
He walks down the street in his
Tidy black uniform and
Shiny black boots.
Little do they know that
Every night he leaves me
Alone
To polish his boots until they
Shimmer, sparkle and shine.
Perfection is vital.
I mustn’t dirty the dress
He bought which is
Unflattering, uncomfortable and
Quite frankly not me.
He doesn’t know I am
Angry.
Eleanor Dix
Eleanor Dix, aged 17, receives ‘Emergency Kit’ edited by JoShapcott and Matthew Sweeney (Faber). Submitted by Sue Dymoke of West Bridgford School, Nottingham, who receives a set of Poetry Society posters with teacher’s notes. Please send students’ poems to ‘TES’ Young Poet, Admiral House, 66-68 East Smithfield, London E1 9XY. Anthony Wilson is Poetry Society poet-in-residence for primary education, and the author of ‘How Far From Here Is Home?’ (Stride). He co-edited ‘The Poetry Book for Primary Schools’ (Poetry Society)
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