Analysis Of Paul Celan's Aspen Tree

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A Once Vibrant Life Gone with the Wind Paul Celan composed his feelings for his mother regarding both her life and her passing in his poem “Aspen Tree.” The entire work is a vessel for his emotions toward her early departure and comparisons of the life she lived with various objects in nature. However, one emblem in particular perfectly represents Celan’s idealization of his mother. It can be argued that Celan uses the dandelion to epitomize his mother’s life because it highlights his themes of transiency, the light of life within darkness, and the cheating nature of death. Comparison between the dandelion, other wonders in nature, and his mother’s life support this claim as well as contextual hints from the piece itself. Dandelions are typically …show more content…

Now, the weed’s sole purpose is to attempt to continue life and carry on its saga of beauty (thus leading to the next generation) until it is time for its final rest. Despite spreading these seeds, however, the dandelion itself will inevitably perish. The seed head is most prominently similar to his mother’s life during her time in the Ukraine concentration camp. She was trapped; the bottom of her hourglass was filling, and soon she would be nothing more than a passing memory. Figuratively, she had lost her vivid pigmentation within life in addition to her will to endure because there was simply no way she could extend her time and elude death. Similarly, a seed head has lost its hope to continue living itself, and no matter how desperately it tries, even a single one of its seeds sprouting will not save the parent. Celan’s mother began to wilt in the deplorable and hopeless conditions, and was thus weeded from the morose garden, never to uproot …show more content…

It portrayed the themes of ephemerality, life in the face of death, and the dastardly characteristics of death. Just like his mother, the dandelion was able to accomplish conveying the emotions and thoughts he held. The dandelion has a brief lifespan, and once it has completed its journey it departs for good. Even though the garden it lived in had poisonous soil, the dandelion was still able to stay alive (if only for a little while) in the wasteland. Finally, the brevity of the weed’s life is shadowed by the remaining beauty in the world, and this portrays the author’s feelings of being cheated by his mother’s untimely death. Her life is gone like a breeze, but her beauty will remain an eternal

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