the long queen

    Cards (12)

    • The Long Queen is a poem about the symbol of female success, and her reign being illustrated by supporting other women.
    • The poem explores the reign of Elizabeth i (1558 - 1603) who never married and had no children.
    • The poem has seven stanzas and six lines. This consistency reflects her stable reign.
    • The first stanza:
      • "couldn't die" - the extent of women's influence and power extending through time
      • "cold weight of the crown" - sacrifice, burden that she is submissive to
      • Typical Duffy asyndetic list - endless suitors for her, but she chooses to focus on her reign and power.
      • Personification of time
      • Syntax of the last word "Queen" - symbol of power
    • The second stanza:
      • Asyndetic list - she is power and hope to all women and provides support and visibility even to rejected women
      • Consonance "w" - unity of women under the queen
      • Unconditional maternal love
    • The third stanza:
      • Although not visible, her influence is felt. She is like a legend or a fairytale
      • She is idolised by Duffy's mythic semantics
      • Women are safe under her rule - she is loved by all
    • The fourth stanza:
      • She created a society where girls would be protected
      • "girl growing" - ageing, extended sound being emblematic of growing and changing
    • The fifth stanza:
      • She dispels the shame of periods
      • Natural cycle of the moon
      • "Tears: salt pearls, bright jewels" - pain is valuable and cared for, tears not be ignored
      • Fertility and periods portrayed as beautiful - reverses the demonisation of women
    • The sixth stanza:
      • "scarlet" - deep red to reflect pain and blood
      • "sore flowers" - delicacy v raw ache, oxymoron, natural and beautiful but painful
      • Women can still be maternal figures
    • The seventh stanza:
      • She is separated from her subjects - power dynamic
      • "Long Queen" is placed in between two caesuras - isolated but powerful enough on her own.
      • Her devotion to women, she would give up all her materialistic possessions, putting her rule before her own happiness
    • "All her possessions for a moment of time" - Elizabeth i's last words
    • Themes of The Long Queen:
      • Isolation
      • Power
      • Maternity
      • Female solidarity
      • Enduring memory