Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Do not go gentle into that Good Night and for Eleanor Boylan talking with God :: comparison compare contrast essays
Pain and Sorrow in doubting Thomas Do not go reconcile into that Good Night and Sextons for Eleanor Boylan talking with God The end our road that is life, is death and the second we begin to live, we begin to die. A interpreting of death and the loss of a loved one is expressed in two different lights in Dylan Thomas Do not go gentle into that Good Night and Anne Sextons for Eleanor Boylan talking with God. Both express the fear and vulnerability of losing someone you thought should live forever Thomas message is an imperative one a dark and tangible energy whereas Sextons tone is more than passive and softened and more control by sorrow than anger. But as there is an underlying sense of sorrow in Thomas villanelle, there is also a sense of quiet anger. In For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God, Sexton expresses the pain of losing a loved one. There is a surreal quality to the poem, Sexton seems to write as she thinks with a thought inciting a memory she communicates her intents in a very literal concrete way but the poem is still very abstract because there is so little linking these images, adding on to the feeling that you are looking into Sextons very mind and heart. She talks about Eleanor, a friend who is more beautiful than her mother this intimate compliment can be interpreted as more dear than even her mother. An aspect of Eleanor that Sexton respects is her secretiveness with God, there is a child-like trust depicted when the author writes about Eleanor in the kitchen motioning to God. Possibly because Eleanor is wearing a lemon-colored sundress, the reader imagines her with a smile and she feels the borrowing at her own death that Sexton cannot find. Eleanor has more faith than the author in God and who has maintained this faith even when she is dying. Sexton wrote that God had a face when she was six and a half meaning he was a tangible figure. The six-year-old Sexton had a familiarity with God, she knew what he looked like he was her friend, as is the feeling in most children about God. But this image of god has become a huge jellyfish that covers the sky. There is no comfort in a slimy jellyfish and Sexton does not find any comfort in God.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.