Analysis Of Is My Team Plowing

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Life after death is a controversial subject and is touchy for people because of its controversy, many believe in an afterlife while others do not. These ideas influence how the poem “Is My Team Plowing” by A.E. Housman is perceived by the reader; they either believe that the soul cannot pass on happily until the worries of the troubled soul are calmed or if they do not believe then they will see the poem as a dead man wishing that he lived on. Life through death is the major theme in the poem as the first narrator is dead but talks to the second narrator who is alive in order to find out how the world has changed without the first narrator living to see it. The first narrator uses metaphors to hide his worries and to allude to his death.
A.E. …show more content…

The farms normal activities continue as they normally would even though the leader of the team has passed away and is no longer leading the team through their normal activities. The farm that he used to live on has not been affected by the death of the owner. Narrator one believes that everything will change now that he is dead, in his ethereal form he wants to know that he is missed and his life meant something to the world. The dead narrator has unfortunately for him, not impacted the world enough for things or people to miss him or be truly affected by his death. The dead narrator worries shift from that of the work that has to be done on his farm to a sport he presumably plays in his off time, soccer or football depending where you are from and Housman being from England refers to it as soccer in the poem. The dead narrator’s focus has shifted to soccer and if they are playing without him “by the river shore” (Housman 10). The narrator then asks “Now I stand no more?” in reference to how they are playing without him …show more content…

When asked if “his girl is happy” and “has she tired of weeping, As she lies down at eve?” (Housman 17-20). The alive narrator responds with "Aye, she lies lightly, She lies down not to weep; Your girl is well contented, Be still, my lad, and sleep" (Housman 21-24). This response shows how that even someone who you share a close relationship with also does not miss you forever and time heals the wounds that have been inflicted by what has happened to them. You never forget what they have done in their life and how they have changed them eternally, but they do not feel the pain they did when the event initially happened after some time. Even death of the closest of family members does not burn your soul forever and every person feels better with time. This is the case for the dead man 's sweetheart who has lost her man and has come to love a new man, the second narrator. When asked if "has he found to sleep in, A better bed than mine?" (Housman 26-27) he replies with "Yes lad, I lie easy, I lie as lads would choose; I cheer a dead man 's sweetheart, Never ask me whose" (Housman 28-32). Housman uses the metaphor to show how the friendship can blossom into a romance that helps both cope with the pain of

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