Essay sample library > Comparing Death in Do not Go Gentle into That Good Night and Australia, 1970

Comparing Death in Do not Go Gentle into That Good Night and Australia, 1970

2023-01-21 13:16:25

Dylan Thomas' "Do not have a gentle and beautiful night", Judith Wright's "Australia, 1970" mortality rate is a common theme in traditional poetry and contemporary poetry. Traditionally, death has always been seen as a wonderful balance of people, and as a terrible and noble experience it is best to tackle it with quiet, dignified and Christ like acceptance. But this piece of information is quite different in contemporary poets such as Dylan Thomas and Judith Wright's work.

In contrast to the popularity of Emily Dickinson, please do not put it gently in the disdainful attitude of the good night and the resistance to death. Because I can not stop death. Please do not enter such a forgiveness slowly, please use the dominant image and figurative words to create strong resistance and resistance, but she is against because I can not stop dying, Submissive tone and awe. Do not enter quiet quietly, the poet Thomas, like Dickinson using a "horse-drawn carriage", refers to the theme of fire repeatedly and the "death in the light" that refers to angry symbolic resistance Extended metaphor on the process of death using a very passionate metaphor like. Respect for Dickinson's death is obvious. Because she began writing this poem, referring to the death of the first line of the capital, and in fact calling death a respected gentleman.

Dylan Thomas wrote the poem "Do not be proud of death" by John Dunn, "Do not spend that wonderful night gently" and showed a contrasting view of death. In the poem "Please do not grace that wonderful night", Dylan Thomas explained the great or funny guy who died in his later years in a quiet and inappropriate way. Thomas encourages people to think that death should be a fight rather than a silent acceptance. This is obvious in the second line that Thomas wrote: "An elderly person should burn and laugh at the end of the day" (889). In contrast, John Don's poem "I am proud rather than dead" suggests that death be considered a pleasant temporary experience as we live in paradise forever. This means that on lines 13 and 14 I wrote that "A short sleep has woken up forever, the death disappears and the death you die."