Introduction
To begin with, it is necessary to mention that poetry has always aimed to draw someone’s attention to some certain matter. The matters raised in the verses are oppositely different, but lyrical poetry has relations as its key feature. Child-Parent relations are one of the most essential and significant parts of our world
Main text
The verses offered for the analysis reveal the Adult Child–Father aspect of family relations.
Robert Hayden is probably one of the best known for his verses that discover and articulate the African-American practice, from the epoch of slavery, and the times of Civil War, up to the time he lived in. “Those Winter Sundays,” is a poem telling about a son memorizing his father, and it may be regarded as a brilliant instance of one of these poems reveal the matters of realizing individual understanding. It is obvious that there was detachment between them and a bit of contact or even warmth. It is revealed although, in memory, that love in fact was existing. It was simply conversed delicately only due to father’s attempts, particularly by creating blazes in the early morning that was “driven out the cold” The verse appears to be a grieve of the information that the son, who at the pointed period could not recognize such delicate signs of love, never get them back.
As for the other poems, though their themes and narrators do not inevitably link with the lyricist who creates them, it is necessary to mention that Hayden was not essentially raised by his real parents, who raised him from the age of eighteen months.
James Brown in the “Poem for my Father” gives the allegory using ocean in the meaning of life:
Today I’m watching how
The ocean slides in at low tide
It reminds life as life may be calm or stormy, deep or shallow as any ocean or sea, and the low tide denotes here the calmness of author’s life. Most obviously, that he also remembers childhood, and his parents before their death.
Each wave just like a thought,
Surging up out of the mind,
This passage gives the reader to realize that these recollections, being compared with the sea waves bring positive emotions with them, if only the sea did not take his father’s life. But nothing is told here about it. James brown just gives to realize, that ocean, and living on the shore are closely associated with his father for. And the horizon is represented here with the association of currently unachievable times, that stayed to live only in good memories.
Seamus Heaney wants us to notice the echo, in the lines of his poem “Digging”. It is quoted in almost every conversation of Heaney’s work for its prophetic record of the objectives that dominate his poetry. The most significant thing about “Digging,” is that it is represented in the shape of a swear, an obligation from the lyricist to his father and grandfather, whose lives were spent accurately digging the earth. The writer admits that he is not a planter, and will never take their profession. But at the beginning of his profession, he swears to interpret their assets into a different type of occupation:
The cold smell of potato mould, the squelch and slap
Of soggy peat, the curt cuts of an edge
Through living roots awaken in my head.
But I’ve no spade to follow men like them.
Between my finger and my thumb
The squat pen rests.
I’ll dig with it.