Metaphors In Those Winter Sundays

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In Robert Hayden’s “Those Winter Sundays”, Hayden writes about the sacrifices made by a father for the sake of his child. The father’s love is shown as quiet and simple, and it is through his sacrifices that the warmth of his love is felt by his child. Through Hayden’s use of metaphors, contrast, and visual imagery, he is able to build upon the theme that a father’s love is quiet and full of sacrifices. Hayden’s use of the metaphors cold and warm develops the idea of the importance of the father's love in his child’s life. Hayden first introduces the metaphor cold in line two as the father ”put his clothes on in the blueblack cold” (2). Hayden then revisits the same metaphor in the second stanza; “I’d wake and hear the cold splintering” (6) and in the final stanza by writing that the child’s father” had driven away the cold” (11). The word cold is commonly associated with the feeling of emptiness and loneliness.The father in the poem metaphorically drove away the emptiness felt by his child by driving away the cold. Contrasting the metaphor of cold, Hayden uses the word warm to replace the cold felt by the child before the father’s loving actions. Hayden …show more content…

First off when reading the title “Those Winter Sundays”,a visual image of warmth and relaxation enters one’s head as winter Sunday’s are associated with family and warmth. This feeling of warmth and relaxation felt by the child is due to the fact his father metaphorically and literally drove away the cold and brought the feeling of warmth to his child. When looking at the first stanza the words “blueblack” (Hayden 2) and “ached” (3) are used to describe the cold the father is facing and his exhausting after a week's worth of work. This vivid description of the father’s aches and pains allows the reader to comprehend the sacrifices the father makes out of love for his

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