Charles Bukowski's The Last Night Of The Earth

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‘Bluebird’ one of Charles Bukowski's most iconic and controversial poetic works, written in 1992 in Bukowski’s collection of poems titled ‘the last night of the earth’. The reader is introduced to themes of inner peace and harmony, whilst societal pressures of stereotypes and afflictions are waging against it. “Bluebird” speaks of innermost torment. There is almost an alternate personality hidden in the depths of the speaker’s life, referred to as the bluebird itself. The speaker is afraid to let the bluebird show, at risk of losing what he has managed to hold onto through his depression and sorrow experienced. Bukowski packs a lot of meaning into few lines; this poem makes me think about how people view me versus how I am truly inside, whether …show more content…

Bukowski illustrates an image of how the he wants the world to perceive him and in this sense, he has always got an undertone of an opposing force deeply rooted inside of him; which I feel is highly accountable for his depression. He has used the bluebird as a metaphor for his inner emotions and perceived ‘weakness’ which he contines to nurture and acknowledge throghout the whole poem, this is highly evident in the line ‘he's singing a little in there, I haven't quite let him die’. I feel as if that nobody is completely one way or another, in a sense that not all woman clean or not all men are tough. We as a society are constantly innundated with photos of cleaning products moddeled by women, derrogitery terms which imply that being ‘gay’ or ‘retarded’ is a bad thing. I have also noticed that everyone is heavily influenced through media, which is nowadays is at our fingertips, due to our phones and the internet, I have personally seen the cuases and effects of societal pressures that have been projected through some form of social media. At one point or another the imagine of the person that Bukowski has created, has been influenced and possibly even groomed by his parents to act ‘manly’ and not show emotion, we see that he realises the

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