He enjoyed traveling around the country, reading his poetry at different venues. Poetry had recently become more popular in America, so he had many people who wished to hear his reading. The people in America who heard his reading loved the archetypal romantic feel of his readings. Romanticism was popular in the US at the time, so his theatrical antics, Welsh lilt, and heavy drinking were popular in America. Thomas engaged in at least one affair during these trips to America, which led to the popular belief that he and his wife had several affairs on each other (Dylan Thomas). His last trip to the US was in 1953. During this trip, he had a bout of heavy drinking, which resulted in his passing away at St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York (Dylan Thomas Swansea). Following his death, he was buried in Laugharne, not in his father’s land, but in his own (Dylan …show more content…
His rhyme scheme is aba, which is repeated for his 6 stanzas, 5 of which are 3 lines apiece. The subject he speaks to is all of us, any of us who happens to be ready to do so. The opening phrase is saying that we shouldn’t just disappear from the world. Thomas tried to put across the point that we shouldn’t accept death as inevitable. He tries to address us to tell us that we shouldn’t sit and wait for death to come for us. To “rage, rage against the dying of the light” is saying that we should fight back, or rage, against our death, the dying of our light. Thomas tries to use each stanza to tell different groups of people to fight death: wise men who find it inescapable, good men who accept the world as it is, wild men who may act crazy normally while accepting the apparently inevitable, and grave men who are already on death’s doorstep, waiting for the end (Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night - Poem by Dylan