Poet Dylan Thomas
Poet Dylan Thomas
This paper discusses poet Dylan Thomas and his poem "The Force that through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower".
1,465 words (
approx. 5.9 pages) |
3 sources |
APA | 2005
Paper Summary:
This paper explains that the poetry of Dylan Thomas demands to be read aloud especially his poem "The Force that through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower" in which the Welsh force dominates every syllable and needs to be heard forcefully. The author points out that it is important to remember that Dylan lived during WW I and II and the Cold War; much of his poems seem to have a dark, almost wintry side to them, some of them dealing with the havoc of fire bombs,air raids and the bruised bodies of soldiers and civilians alike. The paper concludes that, although written generations ago, this poem still exerts a magnetism in its few, short lines: Even with all the hi-tech and modern machinery in the 21st century, man is still a slave to nature.
From the Paper:
"Even in this early youthful poem, there is a rage within the poet- a force that is angry and not at peace with Nature, resenting that factor of growing old, growing apart, having lovers leave and/or die. This can easily be seen in the two-time use of the adjective "crooked": first, the crooked rose, indicating a slow decay, and then the crooked worm, which tends to indicate the worms that invade one's mortal remains, even getting under and through the shroud, the sheet.
Thomas, the poet, mourns a dead lover, and, perhaps to soothe her as well as to be at one with what will happen to him one day, says "How at my sheet goes the same crooked worm." We cannot escape our fate of death and decay. It is all around us. It is an insurmountable force that impels us through life. Yes, we can stop of "smell the roses", but roses die before we do, and then, we await the following spring's revival, only to see the force of nature rob us of the presence and the smell of that new "green" rose, as well. It is in imagery that Thomas is forceful."
Poet Dylan Thomas (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Poet-Dylan-Thomas/63768
"Poet Dylan Thomas" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Analytical-Essay-Poet-Dylan-Thomas/63768>