Comparing Digging and Follower by Seamus Heaney
Here we will analyse 2 poems by Seamus Heaney called "Digging" and
"Follower". We will look at the similarities and differences between
these poems. In both these poems Heaney puts emphasis on many subjects
related to his life such as his childhood memories of growing up in
Northern Ireland and the conflict there. His father also features
strongly in both poems as a main influence on his life.
We will be analysing the two poems form and content. The content of
the poems reveals much about Heaney's life and by comparing the form
and content of the two poems, we can uncover much about Heaney's
feelings and style of writing.
The poem "Digging" was written by Seamus in 1964 and was one of the
first poems he wrote. This poem is about a man looking down on his
father digging in the garden both now and in the past. He reminisces
about moments in the past of both his father and grandfather digging
potatoes. This is a family tradition, however one that he can not
continue with in the literal sense, but by writing poems and "digging"
with his pen, he continues the tradition.
"Follower", was written later than "Digging" and in many ways follows
on from it, but this period of time is conveyed by the differences in
the writing style. "Follower is about Heaney's dad ploughing the
fields, much in a digging manor, with himself "following" behind. This
poem shows his father as someone he can look up to in life. The poem
goes into description about the ploughing of the land showing his
father as an expert in this field, however, he is left unable to
follow in his fathers footsteps and turns to writing instead.
The similarities and differences of these poems are uncovered when the
form and content is studied closely. If we start with the similarities
in the content we can see many things and these similarities convey
the continuation from Digging to Follower.
Both contain childhood memories, mainly of his father and references
The poem told the story of a man who is inhibited by language, and has never quite had the ability to articulate his thoughts and feeling through words. It is said that his family members have tried
The poem is written in the father’s point of view; this gives insight of the father’s character and
“Those Winter Sundays” tells of Robert Hayden’s father and the cold mornings his father endures to keep his family warm in the winters. In “Digging” Heaney is sitting in the window watching his father do hard manual labor, which has taken a toll on his body. In “My Father as a Guitar” Espada goes to the doctors office with his father and is sitting in the office with his dad when the doctor tells him he has to take pain killers and to stop working because his body was growing old and weak. The authors of the poems all look at their fathers the same; they look at them with much respect and gratitude. All three poems tell of the hard work the dads have to do to keep their family fed and clothed. “The landlord, here a symbol of all the mainstream social institutions that hold authority over the working class” (Constantakis.) Espada’s father is growing old and his health is deteriorating quickly but his ability to stop working is not in his own hands, “I can’t the landlord won’t let me” (774.) “He is separated from the homeland, and his life in the United States is far from welcoming” (Constantakis.) Espada’s Grandmother dies in Puerto Rico and the family learns this by a lett...
There is no greater bond then a boy and his father, the significant importance of having a father through your young life can help mold you to who you want to become without having emotional distraught or the fear of being neglected. This poem shows the importance in between the lines of how much love is deeply rooted between these two. In a boys life he must look up to his father as a mentor and his best friend, the father teaches the son as much as he can throughout his experience in life and build a strong relationship along the way. As the boy grows up after learning everything his father has taught him, he can provide help for his father at his old-age if problems were to come up in each others
As Carter opens the poem, he tells how at this point in his life, he still has this essential want for things his own father presented him growing up. In the beginning, he expresses he has this “…pain [he] mostly hide[s], / but [that] ties of blood, or seed, endure” (lines 1-2). These lines voice how he longs for his father and just how painful it is without him at his side. In addition, he still feels “the hunger for his outstretched hand” (4) and a man’s embrace to take [him] in” (5). Furthermore, Carter explains how this “pain” he “feel[s] inside” (3) are also due to his “need for just a word of pr...
father’s childhood, and later in the poem we learn that this contemplation is more specifically
... overall themes, and the use of flashbacks. Both of the boys in these two poems reminisce on a past experience that they remember with their fathers. With both poems possessing strong sentimental tones, readers are shown how much of an impact a father can have on a child’s life. Clearly the two main characters experience very different past relationships with their fathers, but in the end they both come to realize the importance of having a father figure in their lives and how their experiences have impacted their futures.
The poem starts out with the daughter 's visit to her father and demand for money; an old memory is haunting the daughter. feeding off her anger. The daughter calls the father "a ghost [who] stood in [her] dreams," indicating that he is dead and she is now reliving an unpleasant childhood memory as she stands in front of his
The poetry by these two poets creates several different images, both overall, each with a different goal, have achieved their purposes. Though from slightly different times, they can both be recognized and appreciated as poets who did not fear the outside, and were willing to put themselves out there to create both truth and beauty.
Thomas uses a great deal of tone and emotion in his literary works, especially this poem that I have researched. His tone is very restricted emotionally which is that he expresses his feelings with an instinctual emotion. Thomas tone is very urgent and possessive when he explains each stage his father has experienced. The poem reads how the writer idolizes his father which defines the magnitude of his love for him. Thomas implies in this poem that life is important; especially how you live it, in that there is no greater feeling than to live life happy, to the fullest and with absolutely no regrets. Thomas identifies every characteristic his father resembles to him in corresponding stanzas. The poem is built to...
The poem “Daddy” is similar to a final statement of freedom to a father from his daughter. The simple title suggests that it was meant for one particular person and that person is this woman’s father. The fifth line in the poem, “Barely daring to breathe or Achoo,” suggest that the narrator is feeling trapped because of her father and her feelings towards him (Plath 866). The visual image that can be interpreted from this sections is of how one would feel if they lived in a very small place with no room to move or breathe. The simple way to describe how the daughter is feeling is to say that she feels confined by exactly who her father was. This woman feels the weight of the world on her or perhaps it is the burden of who her father is that weighs her down, and in line eight she describes her father as “Marble-heavy, a bag full of God”(Plath 866). The reference to God suggest that the father was viewed as a god himself by his daughter at first, similar to any little girl who looks up to their daddy. The father is portrayed as a very large and imposing man, especially in line ten where his size is being compared to a Frisco seal, which brings to mind a very large aquatic mammal with blubbery features (Plath...
father. He admires the times he had with his father, and seeing both of them walk in an
In the analysis of poetry one is always looking for the universal truth and how it relates to life. In the case of a child losing a parent, it strengthens the concept of the child’s own mortality. When your father’s generation gradually disappears it reminds you that your generation is the next in line.
Ever since children are young growing up and becoming an adult is something that children cannot wait for while it is something their parents dread. Seamus Heaney published his poem Follower in 1966 in his book Death of a Naturalist. Follower mostly takes place in the past where Heaney viewed his father as role model and wanted to be like him. Heaney was his father's shadow, but as time progressed his father then in turn became his follower and his shadow. Heaney published another poem titled The Harvest Bow in 1979. In The Harvest Bow Heaney talks about his memories of his father plating and making a bow out of wheat, something he did very often
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