‘Plaits' by Elizabeth Smither – Grade 9 Study Guide for Cambridge iGCSE

Ace your exam with this analysis of Elizabeth Smither's 'Plaits' Analysis Elizabeth Smither’s poem Plaits comes from her 1998 collection The Blue Coat, which reflects on memory, identity, and human values. In this poem, Smither recalls the childhood ritual of having her hair braided into two plaits. At first, the description seems simple and concrete, but as the poem develops, the plaits become a powerful extended metaphor for balance, fairness, and inclusion. Through natural imagery, free verse, and flowing enjambment, Smither suggests that justice and equality are as fundamental as the natural world itself. The poem captures how childhood experiences can reveal deeper truths about morality and human connection. 00:00 Intro 00:05 Context 01:29 Structural overview 04:35 Title 05:51 Line-by-line analysis Additional resources For more exam tips, resources, and one-to-one tutoring, visit my website: www.clairesnotes.com Check out the rest of my videos on the poems from the Cambridge iGCSE Vol 2 2026 onwards anthology:    • Songs of Ourselves Vol 2 2026   Subscribe and Stay Ahead Subscribe to Claire's Notes for detailed, exam-focused insights into GCSE English Literature and Language. Master exam techniques, explore poetry, and secure grades 7, 8, and 9. The Poem Plaits by Elizabeth Smither I had two plaits: one thick an anaconda plait and the other more like a thin grass snake. My parting was on one side a harvest, a rich waterfall and a thin trickling river but they were companionably joined and tied with a wide ribbon whose loops and bows were equal. The weak and the strong were strong together, the raised segments of hair, a wide and thin muscle a lesson that hung down my back so though I could not see justice I could feel how it was distributed. About Me I’m an experienced English teacher with over 25 years of classroom and private tutoring experience. My videos are tailored to help students achieve top marks in AQA, Edexcel, OCR, Eduqas, CCEA and Cambridge IGCSE English exams. Please note that any literature analysis is highly subjective and may disagree with analysis by another person. All interpretations are valid if they can be justified by reference to the text. This interpretation is my own: it is not exhaustive and there are alternatives! Let’s Discuss! Elizabeth Smither’s Plaits turns a simple childhood memory into a meditation on fairness and equality. How does the imagery of snakes, rivers, waterfalls and harvests transform two ordinary plaits into symbols of justice and balance? What role does form play — the uneven stanzas, flowing enjambment, and run-on sentences — in creating a sense of natural progression and freedom? Does the plain, childlike diction make the moral lesson more powerful because it feels instinctive and inherent? And finally, how far does the poem suggest that contradictions in childhood identity — strength and weakness, difference and similarity — are not flaws, but natural states to be embraced? Let me know your thoughts in the comments — I’d love to hear how you interpret it!

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