1. Imagine a typical Irish seaside town in summer. Describe what you see, hear, smell, taste and feel. Now do the same, but in winter.
2. People from different cultures can look at things very differently. For example, a thumbs-up gesture used by Westerners to mean approval or agreement, may be considered rude in Turkey. Are there any typically Irish practices that outsiders might see as unusual?
3. together to make words. Some other languages use ideograms. Instead of representing sounds, ideograms each represent a different idea. How might this system affect your way of describing the world?
COMPREHENDING AND RESPONDING
1. this have for the seaside town?
2. from the poem to support your answer.
3. Why do you think he chose to include them?
4. How is a change of perspective conveyed in line 13? How many perspectives do we encounter in the poem?
5. The proprietor watches from the door ‘as if the world were young’. What does this convey about the way the proprietor sees the world outside his door?
7. only seen, but that ‘the light / of heaven’ falls upon them? Explain your answer.
8. but a deeper reading reveals insights into political and social realities of Northern Ireland. Do you agree?
1. Imagine you are the proprietor. Write a letter to a relative in Hong Kong describing your surroundings and commenting on some of the interesting aspects of Irish culture.
2. on a poet and portray aspects of contemporary Irish life. Write the text for your competition entry in which you identify the elements in ‘The Chinese Restaurant contemporary Irish life the poem portrays.
3. Write a descriptive essay about your home town. Try to build up a collage of images the way Mahon does in stanza one.