Friday, August 2, 2019
Cold Knap Lake :: English Literature
Cold Knap Lake    This poem is about an incident from the poet's childhood. Cold Knap  Lake is a real place near Barry in Glamorgan, South Wales. It is a  Bronze Age burial site, and something of a local beauty spot. A little  girl is drowned in the lake, or so it seems, but the poet's mother  gives her the kiss of life, and her (the poet's) father takes the  child home. The girl's parents are poor and beat her as a punishment.  At this point, the poet wonders whether she, too, "was...there" and  saw this (the beating, rather than the rescue) or not. The poem is  inconclusive - the writer sees the incident as one of many things that  are lost "under closing water".    What begins as a reflection on a vivid memory ends by recognizing the  limits and vagueness of the way we recall the past. In the opening  lines, the poet seizes the reader's attention with the seeming  seriousness of death. This makes the mother's action seem yet more  miraculous. If we assume that the "wartime frock" is being worn during  (not after) the Second World War, then the poet (born in 1937) would  have been at most eight years old. The mother is a "heroine" but her  action has nothing to do with the war. The rest of the crowd either do  not know about artificial respiration, or fear to take the initiative.  And they are "silent" perhaps because they do not expect the child to  recover. The poet notes how her mother's concern is selfless - she  gives "her breath" to "a stranger's child". (We can contrast this with  the poet's admission of her own coldness to someone else's child in  Baby-sitting.) The image also suggests the miracle of creation as  related in Genesis (the first book of the Bible), where God gives Adam  life, by breathing into his nostrils.    Back to top    The poet does not condemn, but seems shocked by, the child's being  "thrashed for almost drowning". But for all we know, the parents who  beat her thought this was the right way to teach their daughter to be  more careful. (The incident may also explain the poet's reluctance,  years later, as she writes in Catrin, to let her own daughter skate in  the dark.)    In the penultimate stanza, the lake of the title supplies an apt image  of memory. Under the shadow of willow trees, cloudy with "satiny mud",  stirred as the swans fly from the lake - the "troubled surface" hides  any exact information. What really happened lies with many other "lost  things" under the water that closes over them - in the lake, where    					    
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