The speaker can remember even the tiniest detail about his father, down to "the slight catch, / the depth from his thin chest" (3-4). The child cared very deeply about his father, even more tonight, and is thinking about him. The tone of the second poem is established by the diction used by the author. Upon first glance, the tone of the poem is amusing. The scene that the reader's mind forms is rather comical, with the child holding on for dear life as his chuckling father spins him around. However, the lines "At every step you missed / My right ear scraped a buckle" (Roethke 11-12) suggest that the boy is being injured by this careless dance. Furthermore, when the author states, "You beat time on my head" (13) it leads the reader to believe that the father is abusive of the boy. The speaker says "We romped until the pans / Slid from the kitchen shelf" (5-6). The word romped evokes a playful tone, and is not usually…