the happiest and healthiest of relationships‚ either. The Possessive by Sharon Olds describes a family scenario where the mom grieves as she feels she is losing control over her daughter. In “Those Winter Sundays”‚ there is a theme of sacrificing for your family‚ regardless of the lack of appreciation given back. While both are attention grabbing stories‚ between the two‚ “The Possessive” by Sharon Olds evokes the interest of readers more than “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden because of the
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Reading Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden‚ I cannot help but feel the poet now grown and becoming a parent himself‚ is reflecting. The poem does not talk of the authors present‚ but I can imagine that some life event has caused this revisiting of the past. The tone leaves one with a sense of regret‚ a longing to return to childhood‚ to revisit the unappreciated moments. The author seems to speak almost in a narrative‚ as if almost confessing to anyone who will listen. Thinking back to the
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Those Winter Sundays By Robert Hayden’s Robert Hayden’s Poem‚ "Those Winter Sundays‚" is the perfect example of a life lesson. As a child growing up there are things we do not realize but eventually life reveals the significance of curtain things and in this poem Hayden’s has this experience. This poem shows how we take things and people closest to us for granted. He does this in three ways‚ blatantly‚ with the language he uses‚ and also with the mood and tone he sets. The speaker
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For my gut reaction writing‚ I read “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden. The poem brought back memories of cold winter nights by the fire. My living room has a gas fire‚ and even when it is below 40‚ the living room can still be 80. The second stanza reminded me of the days I would spend cross country skiing‚ especially the part where Hayden says the cold is splintering and breaking‚ because when you are cross country skiing in the mountains around Seattle‚ you can hear each little sound caused
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Those Winter Sundays By: Robert Hayden In the poem “Those Winter Sundays”‚ the speaker is reflecting on his childhood and his lack of real emotion towards his father while he was a young child. When the speaker becomes an adult‚ he regrets not realizing that his father had his own way of affection towards him. In the present‚ the speaker realizes how hard and desolate it is to show parental love to someone. The poem‘s diction helps paint a vivid picture to the reader about the emotions in this
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Robert Hayden’s "Those Winter Sundays": A Child’s Memory Oftentimes we look back at a certain point in our lives with regret. We feel that if only we had known then what we know now‚ things would have been different. As we grow older‚ our view of the world is altered through experience and maturity. In Robert Hayden’s "Those Winter Sundays‚" the speaker is a man reflecting on his past and his apathy toward his father when the speaker was a child. As an adult the speaker has come to understand
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Those Winter Sundays Historical Context/Info about Author: Robert Hayden grew up in a poor African-American section of Detroit known as Paradise Valley. At a young age‚ his parents separated and his mother could no longer afford to keep him so he was sent to live with a foster family. His adoptive father was a strict Baptist and manual laborer and while he was a stern man‚ he always attempted to care for and nurture Hayden’s love of literature. Summary: The poem‚ composed in 1962
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When you first read the poem "Those Winter Sundays" you will quickly find out who the speaker is and what their relation is to the father in the poem. Line 1 says "Sundays too my father got up early" which indicates that the speaker is the child of the father in this work of literature. Robert Hayden uses several different poetic techniques to make his point and have the reader really think about what they are reading. In "Those Winter Sundays" there are several different alliterations Hayden uses
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The poem‚ “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden‚ the relationship between the father and the son is a classic case of “I didn’t appreciate my parent until I was older.” From the last line on the first stanza we are shown that no one really appreciated all the hard work the father did for the family‚ or more so it was an unnoticed act. At the end the relationship changes from being ungrateful to a realization of how he was towards his father‚ and grows an immense love and respect for him. The relationship
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In the poem‚ “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden‚ the author uses subtle symbolism to reflect the speaker’s distant relationship with his father. The title of the poem immediately tells the reader that the poem takes place in winter‚ a time that connotes both coldness and gloominess. Hayden starts his short‚ redolent poem by writing that the speaker’s father put his clothes on in the‚ “blue black cold” (Hayden line 2). The reader instantly feels the cold and iciness inside and outside the house
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