Saturday, July 20, 2019
In this essay I will compare the presentation of family in digging
In this essay I will compare the presentation of family in digging with at least one other poem in identity. I have chosen to select Follower. The title of the poem Digging could refer to turning over soil for planting or harvesting, or digging deeper to uncover some sort of treasure. Alternatively the poet could be thinking of digging up the past, or uncovering some secret hidden in the past. The poem is written from the poetââ¬â¢s perspective and there is no doubt that this poem is about a writer for in the opening lines we learn that: ââ¬ËBetween my finger and my thumb The squat pen rests...ââ¬â¢ The poet is writing in his room which is upstairs and overlooks the garden. His attention is caught by the ââ¬Ëclean rasping soundââ¬â¢ of a spade digging into the ââ¬Ëgravelly groundââ¬â¢. The poet looks out and sees his father digging as he has done for twenty years. Heaney describes his father with great admiration for his strength and skill as a farmer. The poet reflects ruefully on the skill that his father and grandfather possessed with a spade. He is slightly in awe of them as he celebrates their skills and he regrets his own inability to wield a spade. The careful, deliberate, way his father cuts into the earth with his spade makes digging for peat sound like a skilled craft: ââ¬ËThe course boot nestled on the lug, the shaft.ââ¬â¢ When the poet describes his father uncovering the potatoes he uses alliteration again in ââ¬Ëtall topsââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëburied the bridge edge deepââ¬â¢ to capture the sharp, precise sound of the spade entering the soil. When the poet hears the sound of his fathers spade digging he lets us hear it to in the word ââ¬Ëraspingââ¬â¢, an onomatopoeia, and in the hard alliterative sound of ââ¬Ëgravelly groundââ¬â¢. In digging the dis... ... him the child: ââ¬ËFell sometimes on the polished sod; sometimes he rode me on his back.ââ¬â¢ This conveys to the reader just how close the relationship was between father and son but it also shows how following him was not always easy on the rough ground. Now he is grown up though it is his father who is the follower and he now keeps stumbling and ââ¬Ëwill not go awayââ¬â¢ Even though the word ââ¬Ëloveââ¬â¢ is never used in the poem, it is obviously the word that best describes the basis of the relationship existing between Heaney and his father. The poem is very much a personal experience, but it has a much wider significance relating to any kind of hero ââ¬â worship by a ââ¬Ëfollowerââ¬â¢. Now that he is himself an adult, Heaney acknowledges that the father he hero worshipped as a young boy has grown old and needs as much tolerance and patience as he himself once showed his son.
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