Poetic Devices and Imagery
Setting the Scene
Focus & Tribute
Understanding the Text
100

To what animal does the poet compare the artist’s paintbrush?

A hummingbird.

100

Which specific Jamaican geographical landmark "bulks" in the background of the painting?

Blue Mountain Peak

100

To which real-life, renowned Jamaican painter is this poem dedicated?

Albert Huie

100

What specific action is the landscape painter physically doing throughout the poem?

He is sitting outdoors painting a landscape scene of the Jamaican mountains and hills.

200

What figurative device is used in the line, "Sprawl like grandchildren about the knees / Of seated elders"?

Personification and Simile

200

How does the poet describe the mountains posing for the painter?

Dignified and self-conscious.

200

What is the overarching theme of the poem?

Nature, Art, and Jamaican national pride.

200

What does the speaker mean when he says Blue Mountain Peak is "patriarchal in serenity"?

The mountain stands as a dignified, wise, and ancient father figure watching over the landscape.

300

The artist's palette is compared to a "wild small garden." What does this metaphor suggest about his color choices?

It highlights the vibrant, blooming, and diverse array of pigments he uses.

300

In the context of the family portrait metaphor, what do the "low green foot-hills" represent?

The fidgeting grandchildren

300

How does the persona's tone transition from the beginning to the end of the poem?

From a feeling of awe and calmness to one of focused professional concentration and awe.

300

Why does the speaker use the word "patriarchal" to describe the Blue Mountain Peak?

To establish the mountain as a dominant, protective, and ancestral father figure that stands wise and unchanging over the rest of the landscape.

400

Which word in the opening stanza describes both the painter and his easel, emphasizing the precarious and daring nature of his craft?

Straddling

400

How does the poet describe the movement of the sky that challenges the artist's ability to "fix" the scene in time?

Changelessly changing

400

The poet writes about how the artist confines the scene to the "family album" of his canvas. What is the symbolic meaning of this?

It symbolizes the artist immortalizing the fleeting beauty of the Jamaican landscape to preserve it forever.

400

When analyzing the central theme of Art vs. Reality, what core conflict is highlighted by the contrast between a dynamic landscape and a static canvas?

The contrast between the living, dynamic, ever-changing nature of the landscape and the artist's struggle to capture it on a static canvas.

500

In the line "The brush-tip hums a hummingbird's trajectory," what literary device is used through the word "hums" to mimic the auditory experience of a fast-moving brush?

Onomatopoeia 

500

The hills are depicted as "fidgeting" and "tumbling" while the peaks remain still. What structural contrast does this create within the natural Jamaican landscape?

Juxtaposition (between the dynamic, youthful foothills and the static, ancient mountains)

500

The poem celebrates the painter’s ability to "trap" and "fix" the landscape on canvas. How does this act of creation serve as a deeper tribute to Jamaican national identity and self-determination?

It highlights how local artists reclaim ownership of their homeland by defining and preserving Jamaica’s beauty through their own authentic lenses, rather than through an external colonial gaze.

500

The artist's brush is explicitly compared to a hummingbird. Beyond its rapid movement, what is the cultural significance of choosing this specific bird to symbolize the painter's craft?

It connects the rapid, precise, and vibrating physical movement of the brush to the Doctor Bird, a national symbol of Jamaica, thereby cementing the artist's creative labor as an inherently patriotic act deeply rooted in Jamaican identity.