Randall Jarrell's Themes On War By Randall Jarrell

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Randall Jarrell (1914-1965) is respected as a poet but was also known as a literary critic. While he is remembered for his poetry and achievements in that medium of literature, he also wrote many books that are still read today. His education and pursuit of literary knowledge allowed him to take the steps that made him not only the man he was known to be but the poet that is still having his poetry read and understood on many levels. He was not only well educated in literature, but he taught literature as well. He attended Vanderbilt University and was a member of the Academy of American Poets. He taught at many Colleges and Universities as an instructor and lecturer. Jarrell spent four years in the United States Army Air Forces becoming …show more content…

Many of his poems were based on war and soldiers stemming from his experience in the United States Army. While he does talk about his own experiences in the Army, it can be related to by other service members, not just restricted to the United States, but in different branches of different militaries around the world. He preferred to use a straight forward approach when writing and used it as a guide to translate his thoughts to paper. Suzanne Ferguson “identified Jarrell’s themes as ‘relatively few and closely related as they evolve thought his thirty year writing career’” (Literary Resource Center). Since his beginning, each decade saw a change in his writing. In the fifties and into the sixties, many of his themes included loneliness and fear of not only aging but death as …show more content…

Being in the war left a dark mark in his mind which was shown through his poetry and other writings. Usually the characters in his poems are viewed with pity, even when not writing with the theme of war. He used powerful language to make his point in his works and to show that he felt strongly about the subjects he was writing about. The poem “Eighth Air Force” was published in 1969, four years after his death, and was one of his many war themed poems. This poem was not about being in battle, but just being around the “hutment,” or a military encampment of huts, and what the surrounding people are doing there. Throughout the poem Jarrell uses language that can touch all five senses. His use of words brings the poem to life making the reader able to see, hear, touch, smell and even taste what he is describing. Even though the poem is relatively short, being only four stanzas, it takes the reader on a journey to the setting being talked

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