for example this is what i wrote about the glass jar for the essay question:
How have the texts you have studies in this year, shaped your understanding of change?
...The Glass Jar by Gwen Harwood describes the journey of a young boy from childhood to adolescence. The change that this boy undergoes is initiated when the boy naively attempts to trap sunlight in a glass jar, so that he can use the light to exorcise, monsters that frequent his dreams. As expected his plans fail-the dramatic irony here further reinforces the fact that he is still a child. Distraught by this, the boy runs towards the source of remaining comfort, but this was a torturous decision in itself for the boy, as his parents bedroom is seen as the last clearing that he dared not cross. This symbolises his transition from childhood to adolescence as a painful one.
In his parents bedroom, the boy discovers his mother faithless would not turn her face from the gross violence done to her. The fact that the composer describes the parents sexual act as the gross violence shows us the way the child views the act that he has no prior knowledge about. The boy returns to his room, terrified, as he now has to fend for himself. The boys world has changed and he has changed with it. In addition, the biblical allusions present throughout the poem (such as the homonym resurrected sun) suggest that god has exerted influence on the boys experiences. Thereby, Harwood is presenting change as a facet of the boys preordained path through life. In this poem Harwood is affirming change both as part of destiny and as a result of experiencing life.