Comparing
Building the comparison
The exam rewards a comparison that is sustained and two-way. These are the bridges the pairing offers; an essay needs only two or three of them, crossed with real attention to how differently each poet builds his side.
The bridges
Land and labour: ground that is worked, inherited and owed something. Memory and the dead: elegy, family and what survives of the lost. The body: tenderness, damage and desire made physical. Borders and belonging: nation, language and the pull of home. Craft about craft: both poets thinking about making, in poems that watch hands work.
This section grows as the class materials arrive.
Keeping it two-way
Name the connection in the topic sentence, then spend the paragraph on the difference inside it: where Heaney steadies grief with ritual, Sheers often lets it stay raw; where Heaney’s ground holds history, Sheers’s tends to hold a relationship. Generalisations like these are starting points to be tested against particular poems, never conclusions to be asserted.
This section grows as the class materials arrive.