When the protagonist wakes up and opens his eyes, where is the real-world place (city) he is actually?
London
Which sense (sight/hearing/touch, etc.) do "wild seabirds" and "breaking ocean," which appear in the beginning of the poem, stimulate most intensely?
Auditory and visual
This poem does not have a fixed division of lines and stanzas, and there are almost no punctuation marks. (periods, commas, etc.) What is this poetic form called?
Free Verse
What sound does the protagonist of the poem, the 'Island Man,' hear when he wakes up in the morning?
The sound of waves on his home island (the sound of the sea)
In what color did the poet describe the sun on his home island to emphasize a warm and bright image?
Emerald or golden
Why did the poet intentionally avoid using punctuation marks such as periods or commas ? Explain this in relation to the protagonist's state of consciousness
To express the protagonist's 'stream of consciousness,' where the boundary between the dream (island) and reality (London) flows ambiguously.
When describing a London morning in a poem, what is the typical urban noise heard outside the protagonist's room?
The sound of cars on the way to work (ground traffic noise)
What landscape or movement in London does the expression "The grey metallic soar" visualize auditorily and visually?
The speeding and noise of cars during the morning commute (the cold and mechanical image of London)
What was the poet's intention in repeating words like "groggily groggily"?
To emphasize the protagonist's weariness in struggling to wake up and the fatigue associated with life in London.
The real-life clothes the protagonist puts on as he gets out of bed are contrasted with the natural elements of his hometown that he saw in his imagination. How is the color or feel of the 'pillow' he encounters in reality described?
A heavy, bluish-gray (grey-metallic/crumpled, reflecting the cold reality of London)
\The word "muffling" is used in the poem. Does this word show how the protagonist's hearing changes as he transitions from the sounds of the imaginary island to the real sounds of London?
The process by which the sound of waves from one's hometown is muffled or erased by the noise of London.
What is the short sentence that Island Man repeats to himself or accepts resignedly as he gets out of bed at the end of the poem?
To London each day
Specifically, what physical and visual contrasts are formed between the image of a "fisherman pushing out to sea" and the figure of an Island Man rising "groggily groggily"?
The contrast between the vibrant and natural morning of life on the home island and the heavy and lethargic morning in London.