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College Term Papers - Instant Download(sponsored links) Ted Hughes’s “Crow” PoemsThis paper discusses that Ted Hughes’s "Crow" poems, commencing in the 1960s, use the crow as a metaphor for humanity -- 3,740 words; MLA Tone and Theme in Hughes' Poems Explains how Hughes' "Ballad of the Landlord and Madam" and the "Rent Man" use similar voice, tone, and theme, to illuminate the African-American condition of the 1940's. -- 1,405 words; Hughes, Dylan and Auden Poems An examination of three poems by Langston Hughes, W. H. Auden, and Bob Dylan. -- 910 words; MLA Poetry of Emily Dickinson and Langston Hughes A look at how both Emily Dickinson's poem, "Some Keep the Sabbath Going to Church" and Langston Hughes' poem, "Mulatto" reflect the changes that were taking place in American society during the times the poems were written. -- 675 words; Narration of Langston Hughes An analysis of some of Langston Hughes' poems. -- 900 words; |
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HUGHES` POEM
y outset, it is clear that the hawk is in control. The poem begins assertively with the
pronoun I. The hawk is so secure in his position that he is able to announce the fact
that he is resting, inaction, with his eyes closed. There is no falsifying dream - he has
nothing to hide - between his hooked head and hooked feet. The repetition of hooked puts
the reader on guard - it sounds slightly sinister. This idea is confirmed when the hawk
goes on to say that his dreams are single-minded: he rehearses perfect kills. He is
portrayed almost like a military dictator. The irony in the statement My manners are
tearing off heads is intentional: the hawk actually seems proud of the fact that he does
not worry about the way he eats, about how violently he rips up his victims before
consuming them. He is so proud that 'manners' have ceased to matter. Someone in his
unassailable position does not need to consider whom he might be offending. The statement
simply emphasises his sense of absolute superiority.
Hughes published a number of animal poems during his long and distinguished literary
career; these were often (in fact, almost always) harsh and vigorous, painting a picture
of Nature 'red in tooth and claw' - violent, grim, and unsentimental, but at the same
time remorselessly true to itself. In today's poem, Hughes uses the thought-processes of
the hawk as a metaphor for the mind of every megalomaniac who ever lived - the poem
resonates with dictatorial phrases and turns of expression. The hawk lives according to
the rules of its own morality ('No arguments assert my right'), in a world where might is
right. 'I kill where I please because it is all mine' - violent, yes, but also chillingly
insightful. The massive egotism running through the poem is, again, telling in its
implications for the human world. Yet the unstated theme lying underneath the hawk's
soliloquy is this - that the hawk is a product of Nature; its 'personality' is
(ultimately) dictated by Nature, and hence, somehow, proper to itself. On the other hand,
for human beings, untrammelled power is (Hughes seems to say) twisted and sick, leading
only to tyranny and oppression. A final note: the stark contrast between the imperial
majesty of Tennyson's eagle and the vicious tyranny of Hughes' hawk is striking - using
virtually the same basic image, the two poets paint drastically differing pictures which
are, nonetheless, no less true for being worlds apart in their truth. thomas. PS. Hughes
died last year at the age of 68, soon after publishing 'The Birthday Letters', a deeply
moving recollection of his troubled marriage with the equally celebrated poet Sylvia
Plath (who committed suicide). His successor as Poet Laureate has not yet been announced.
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