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Environmental Issues

“Death of a Young Son by Drowning”

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“Death of a Young Son by Drowning”

Margaret Atwood’s earthy poem, “Death of a Young Son by Drowning,” perfectly captures the life-

altering heartache that comes after the loss of a child. Atwood’s words are abundant in texture, and

her similes are bitingly accurate. The extracted stanza, clearly emphasizes the message of “Death of

a Young Son by Drowning”: Even after intense, heart-shattering grief, life goes on. In the passage,

we clearly see the struggle between the life cycle and death. And in a larger sense, we also see the

struggle between motherhood and personhood. Although the child is gone, life continues. Similarly,

although the narrator is now a bereaved mother, her life still extends beyond that role.

Ecocritism can be used to examine the poem. Ecocritism takes an interdisciplinary point of view by

analysing the works of authors, researchers, and poets in the context of environmental issues

and nature. Atwood’s first two stanzas refer largely to the cycle of life and the order in which a family

is, Atwood would argue, supposed to die. The first lines, “He, who navigated with success / the

dangerous river of his own birth / once more set forth,” immediately allude to an archetypal crossing

that is literally a symbol of his birth. It is logical that a second crossing of this river, the first of which is

into life, would be back into death. The narrator herself thought, before her son’s death, that she was

closer to death, and thus “floating on” but not “touching” the land on the opposite side of the river to

which her son is now traveling. There is also a distinct shift in tone and in topic between the seventh and

eighth stanzas. The mention of spring indications that he prior events happened in the winter, as does

reference to ice, a season typically associated with hardship and understood as daunting. Conversely,

the section that is set in spring represents growth. That although the narrator is now a bereaved

mother, her life still extends beyond that role.

References

Margaret Atwood, “Death of a Young Son by Drowning” from The Journals of

Susanna Moodie (Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press, 1969). Copyright ©

1969 by Margaret Atwood. Reprinted by permission of O. W. Toad Ltd.

“Musée des Beaux Arts”

Musee des Beaux Arts is an informal commentary on the bizarre human situations that arise in certain

older paintings, notably one, The Fall of Icarus, which is now in the Musees Royaux des Beaux Arts in

Brussels. The extractaed passage reinforces the idea of separateness, of people at work, at play, whilst

the disaster, the suffering, goes on elsewhere. Is it apathy that takes over? Are people consciously

looking the other way to avoid involvement? There is an irony in this and the speaker captures it in a

subtle, matter of fact fashion. As Icarus dramatically falls into the sea the event for one man was not an

important failure; it made no impression on a passing ship with somewhere to get to; there is no

reaction.

Auden's poem, through the extracted pasage, explores the idea that, as humans, we knowingly

carry on with our familiar and mundane duties as long as we can, even if we know someone may be

suffering.

In the poem, “Musée des Beaux Arts,”the poet appears to write about human suffering, tragedy and

pain by contrasting the lives of those who suffer and those who do not. The vehicle by which this is

achieved is the world of painting, in particular the work of the old masters. Tha poet takes action of

 

explaining why someons can ignore the cries fr help from those experinecung torture and pain. The

paintings the speaker is studying are equivalent to today's T.V. reportage. How many times have we

watched horrific and disturbing images from some remote place in the world, knowing that, not too far

away, normal lives are being lived? These references highlight the strange, contrasting human

experiences that are part of the fabric of life – one person suffers terribly, another carries on regardless

with some mundane activity.Psychological criticism permits a mindful analysis of literary text messaging

through the use of principles in psychology. It basically attempts to get a more thorough understanding

of text messages as far as the readers, authors as well as the literary pieces themselves are worried. All

in all, a persons unconscious plays an important role in internal criticism. Thus, in this poem, people

need routine, fear distraction, and don't like being shocked out of their little lives too often. Suffering

will always happen and there's not much the average person can do about it. Auden through the

speaker detests complacency and irresponsibility in human behaviors thus his ultimate

goal is to present them negatively to invoke change. The responsibility for suffering can

only be achieved through this change.

reference

Eagleton, Terry. How to Read a Poem. London: Blackwell, 2007. Print.

“Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers”

Adrienne Rich uses the passage to depict women roles in the society. The passage explains that

the marriage of Aunt Jennifer is becoming strained. She seems to deal with her emotions by sewing,

which evokes gender roles in society. The heavy ring on her finger makes the reader feel as though

she wishes to take it off. She cannot, however, and even in death her hands will not lie still and calm.

She seems to be trapped in her gender roles as wife and caretaker and is unable to roam free like

the tigers she sews into her cloth.

Using gender criticism to examine the poem, “Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" sounds like a ball

of good times, or at least some big cat-themed excitement. In reality, though,

it's about a woman whose life has been restricted by the patriarchal (male-

dominated) society in which she lives. Now, the poem doesn't give us any

facts about this—it doesn't tell us, for example, that Aunt Jennifer wasn't

allowed to go college, or that Aunt Jennifer's husband didn't give her any say

in financial matters. But the poem does strongly suggest that Aunt J's

opportunities in life have been limited by her gender, and also by her

marriage, which left her "terrified." Bad times. Her wedding band's "massive

weight," the ordeals that mastered her—Aunt J has suffered because of her

gender.

Reference

Rich, A., Gelpi, B. C., & Gelpi, A. (1975). Adrienne Richs poetry: texts of the poems:

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