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Comparing and Contrasting Strongman by Tony Curtis and The Follower by Seamus Heaney

Good Essays

I will compare and contrast these poems, discussing the similarities and differences in detail.

“Strongman” by Tony Curtis is a sonnet, expressing intense emotion. The poem begins in a very conversational manor. “A strongman you say” Shows this, by casually addressing the reader as if part of a conversation. This gives the impression that the writer is talking to the reader directly, almost as if the writer is talking of something personal to him. In the octet, many references to wood are appropriately made, as Curtis’ father is mentioned as being a carpenter. Curtis included these to represent his fathers career. Imagery is used to demonstrate his fathers ‘chest like a barrel’, and ‘neck that was like holding onto a tree.’ Similes are …show more content…

‘Slipped under a frame of bones like plywood’ also displays the fathers physical weakness, as plywood is brittle and weak, and again is a reference to wood.

The quote
‘No trouble - he said. No trouble, Dad -
You said.” Shows that despite both father and son saying the same thing, it has different meaning coming from each. The father doesn’t want to cause any trouble, and feels somewhat embarrassed and ashamed of what he has become. Incapable and weak. The son doesn’t particularly want to physically help him, but he does want to care for his Father, and it is expected of him to do so. These lines of the poem are particularly emotional.

The final line of the poem is ‘And he died in the cradle of your arms’. Along with another reference to wood, it displays another role reversal. The father is described as being in the cradle of his sons arms, whereas many years ago, the son would be in the fathers arms. The son’s arms are protective of him, supporting him, as he dies.

The poem ‘Follower’ by Seamus Heaney is a poem expressing the great admiration that Heaney had for his father as a child. He was brought up on a farm, and often watched his fathers skill in awe as he ploughed the fields. The poem is made up of six quatrains, and a regular rhythm is present, much like that of a horses plodding, across the fields. Also, the poems rhyming pattern is precise, possibly referring to

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