A place to write responses to, and to build interpretations of, literature for College Writing II at Minnesota State Community and Technical College.
Monday, March 10, 2008
"Digging"
In the poem "digging", there is a melancholy tone. The narrator laments about his father who farmed and his Grandfather who dug sod for a living. He is very proud of their work, since he mentions their jobs in such detail and has nothing negative to say about them. He also expresses a fondness of the memories, with "the squelch and slap Of soggy peat"(679-25). At first, I thought that the flowers were a monument for his dead father. Now I think that his father is outside of his window shoveling flowers, and the sound reminds him of "twenty years" before(678-7). His dad was a potato farmer then, and was as good of a digger as his grandfather. His "grandfather cut more turf in a day Than any other man on Toner's bog"(679-17). When we learn about the two men that were great with a spade, and he says "I've no spade to follow men like them", there is a tone of regret. The narrator mentions how his pen is "snug as a gun" in his hand(678-2). This would imply that he takes the pen very seriously. He then says he will "dig with it", which would mean that he will make his living with a pen instead of a shovel.
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