Because I Could Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night Comparison

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Poets like Dylan Thomas, John Donne, and Emily Dickenson all preserve life and death is different ways, each view the experience of death as either positive or negative ”Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night” by Dylan Thomas expresses the anger that comes with losing someone who hasn't made an impact and wanting someone to fight to live. While much different from John Donne’s “Holy Sonnet:Death,be not proud” which personifies death as a way of rest for the bones and delivering of the soul to heaven. Conquesdently this is much similar to Emily Dickinson's “Because I could not stop for death”, in her poem she expresses the journey from life to death viewing it as a natural experience, telling readers to accept the idea of death. Although these poems seem to have many similarities there dynamic differences make them unique from each other in many ways.

In Dylan Thomas’s poem “Do Not Go Gentle …show more content…

From the point of a charming suitor not a weak antagonsist, Dickens attitude towards death it self was much gloomer. Expressing how it is a pleasant experience that is to take away from life. Mortality is a major contributor to this attitude, The speaker is essentially painting a picture of the day she died, this day didn’t seems out of the ordinary. In the third stanza Dickinson shows the beginning of life “we passed the school” then going to midlife “Fields of gazing grain” then into the descent of death itself “We passed the setting sun”. This stanza expresses the idea that death should not be feared as it is inevitable and a natural process. This poem is essentially showing us the path to death, the speaker is almost shocked looking back on the “carriage ride” to their death saying how it feels like yesterday they were alive. Dickinson presents the experience as being no more frightening than receiving a gentleman caller, a grim yet calm attitude to death it

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