Those Winter Sundays Figurative Language

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Winter, the hardest time of the year, has a normal family living with its father. In this poem, the winter season doesn’t keep the whole family from going to church together. So how does the author of this short poem, Robert Hayden, use language to create meaning in this poem? Before sunrise, the speaker of this poem has a stubborn sister and a hardworking father, and figures out a way to help out his father as much as possible. Before sunrise, the speaker of this poem has a stubborn sister and a hardworking father, and tries to figure out a way to help out his father as much as possible. In “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden, the Father follows up on his jobs in the early mornings of winter. Supposedly, the father works in the “blueblack cold.” Comforts his children through the hard work the father does. He also helps out at home by having “banked fires blaze” to have his children warm and cozy. All in all, the father tries to comfort in the cold household/ cold in general. Except, “No one ever thanked him,” only until the speaker tries to help out. With all the hard-work of the speaker’s father, it is all for the comfort of the brother and sister. …show more content…

It is with the “cold splintering, breaking” coldness that only makes the father’s job harder. Except, the worry and tiredness of his father makes him angry in the household. But this also includes the father getting angry because his children were not helping out. “Slowly I would rise and dress,” for the time his father offers to be with his children. Like an illness, “the chronic angers of that house” help keep the brother outside working with his father. With the help the speaker is getting help to his father, the father is growing to the understanding that his son is grateful of his hard

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