Robert Hayden's "Winter Sunday" is a lot of poetry to say in a small space. It uses events to explain the whole relationship between my father and my son. "The Winter Sundays" is a poem written for Robert Hayden's father. Originally the poem did not seem to honor his father, but when we saw deeper, Hayden's praise and love for his father became obvious.
In this poem, Hayden used many descriptive words to set the scene for his work (eg, cold, broken hands, burning of bank flame). His lively words made me think about this diligent father alone in the cold darkness. When Hayden wrote "Sad Hands" (Roberts 759), he used "broken hands" as a symbol of hard work and as a symbol of all the pain and discomfort that men would like to experience for his family I was using it. When he wrote, "I woke up, I heard that the cold crack was broken," Hayden said the same as the sound and image (Roberts 759). Maybe, did the boy really heard the fire, or the ice on the window melted. In any case, this symbolic choice is used to indicate the strength of the father - he has the ability to "break" and "exile" colds for the people he care about.
The warm house of winter Sunday is a symbol of father's love for his son, despite his son establishing this relationship in the second half of his life. In the explanation of the father's "broken hand", the elements of self-sacrifice are obvious.
(Roberts 759) And how did he ignore his pain to warm and illuminate his family? As he was a child, he said "No one has thanked him" (Roberts 759), and he says "he is speaking indifferently to him" (Roberts 759), so he I thought that was natural. Hayden appeared
Until the last section of "Winter Sunday" my son was grateful also for his father's enthusiastic work. He emphasized the word "too" in the first line. People spend the day and rest. The tone and turn of this section is particularly important to show his son's love: he was indifferent to him, he caught a cold and polished my good shoes.
Robert Hayden 's "Winter Sunday", Robert Hayden' s "Winter Sunday", adults, perhaps a man tells his childhood winter Sunday. He remembers the extent that early morning events and his father explained his father's love for him. The man, when he was a child, realized he did not understand that his father worked hard to provide some basic necessities and some additional allowances. - Rita Dove's poem "Daystar" and Robert Hayden's poem "The Winter Sundays" have some similarities, but there are also some differences. These poems are mainly about raising children, nurturing children, and about their own personal problems. Each of the two poems has the greatest interest of their own children, but at two different times two completely different parents deal with very similar problems.