Feliks and 10 Mary

To belong to a group or society gives us a sense of purpose and heightens our identity and well being over time. Nonetheless, there are still situations where isolation is experienced which can have harmful effects on an individual’s well being. The desire for a sense of belonging drives us to search for ways to find it. One way is through ‘place’. A person or group can belong to a particular place, which can enhance the level of belonging between the place, person or group. These perceptions of belonging and not belonging to place are explored in Peter Skrzynecki’s “Feliks Skrzynecki” and “St Patrick’s college”. The themes that strengthen Peter’s message are assimilation and the search for identity. He also uses language techniques such as metaphors, similes and imagery to effectively show the linkages to place.

The first stanza of “Feliks Skrzynecki” shows how Peter feels about his father. “My gentle father…” He then moves to a different emotion, displaying his father as a hard worker with the use of alliteration for emphasis, “…From sunrise to sleep.” But he also shows some negativity between their relationships as he Sais, “Loved his garden like an only child…” His father feels a sense of belonging to the garden, whereas Peter’s use of a simile exaggerates his feeling of disconnection from Feliks. The significance of this is that the garden is a place where his father can connect because of his Polish agricultural background. Peter on the other hand cannot connect because he has no affiliation to the garden and therefore no connection to this ‘place’. Feliks has come to a new country, but has made it familiar through the garden. We can see here how much place can negatively influence ones sense of belonging. Similarly in ‘St Patrick’s College’ he feels a sense of disconnection to the school. “…I stuck pine needles into the motto…” represents his misunderstanding of the schooling system shows the lengthiness of his disconnection from school. The motto is a...