Sunday, January 19, 2020
ââ¬ÅLittle boy cryingââ¬Â by Mervin Morris Essay
Mervin Morris writes ââ¬Å"Little boy cryingâ⬠making reference to the relationship between a kid and an adult, who in this case is his father. Throughout the poem different feelings and emotions are expressed, not only of the child but also of the man. The little boy turned his ââ¬Å"recently relaxedâ⬠face into ââ¬Å"tightâ⬠because of that ââ¬Å"quick slap struckâ⬠his ââ¬Å"guiltyâ⬠father gave him. But despite the fact that the kid took his father as a ââ¬Å"grim giantâ⬠because of hitting him, this manââ¬â¢s intention was not to make him suffer of pain or anything like that; it was just an unwanted but necessary little punishment, perhaps for a prank or misbehaviour. In fact the father felt ââ¬Å"guiltyâ⬠and full of ââ¬Å"sorrowâ⬠. Mervin introduces an allegory of a rather famous story called: ââ¬Å"Jack and the beanstalkâ⬠. The child imagined his father as an ââ¬Å"ogreâ⬠, who climbed a huge tree. ââ¬Å"He hates himâ⬠. He imagined himself ââ¬Å"chopping clean the tree heââ¬â¢s scrambling down or plotting deeper pits to trap himâ⬠, as it happens in ââ¬Å"Jack and the beanstalkâ⬠. The relationship between the ââ¬Å"three-year-oldâ⬠full of ââ¬Å"frustrationâ⬠child and the adult seems to be bursting of complications because the kid is quite capricious and the man has to punish him, so that he learns not to do whatever he wants without evaluating the consequences before. But he ââ¬Å"cannot understand, not yetâ⬠how his ââ¬Å"easy tearsâ⬠affect his father who is wishing to ââ¬Å"curbâ⬠boyââ¬â¢s sadness. Even though an ogre can punish you, you know that he loves you and that you have to learn the ââ¬Å"lessonsâ⬠from him, because you know, very deep inside, that ogre is your father. That last sentence can summaries the moral of the poem. This particular poem uses words to make the reader feel he or she is ââ¬Å"seeingâ⬠it, or being part of it: ââ¬Å"the quick slap struckâ⬠, this last sentence is composed of monosyllabic words that imitate the sound of the hit. Another example of this ââ¬Å"trying the reader to feel part of the poemâ⬠is the use of the ââ¬Å"youâ⬠; it is a kind of conversation between the writer and the reader. Other images that facilitate this process are made by the use of words or phrases suggesting movement or sound, like ââ¬Å"choppingâ⬠and ââ¬Å"scrambling downâ⬠. But in this poem is not all about the kid, and his feelings, the other character has a very important role. He has to pretend being something is not; ââ¬Å"behind that maskâ⬠there is a man who suffers the situation more that the kid, but he has to be seen as a strict authority, as any parent must. This poem reflects nothing but the truth of an ordinary relationship between any father and his son during the growing and maturing process of the kid; but it does not end there: in the last paragraph, which is also the last line, there is a nine words long sentence emphasized by being left alone, that carries a moral in it: ââ¬Å"you must not make a plaything of the rainâ⬠. This is a metaphor that could be translated as: ââ¬Å"you must not cry just becauseâ⬠(the rain represents the tears).
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