Every parent in this world loves children more than anything. Even a child can not leave his parents for a long time. In this world there is nothing more precious than the love of his parents to his / her children. No matter what happens, our parents are always with us. We often make mistakes in our lives, but our parents will support us teaching us to learn from our mistakes and continue our lives. They also tried to teach us from their experience. Parents always sacrifice for their families.
At Robert Hayden's "Winter Sunday", the reader obeys the father's narrator's seemingly dark memory. He works for his family and endured at the cost of many sufferings, he is mainly his son (a talker). As people have read, they saw their father appreciating it. Perhaps this is one of the reasons for father's violence and abuse and the main reason why the narrator is afraid of him. - Robert Hayden's "Winter Sunday" In Robert Hayden's "Winter Sunday", an adult, perhaps a man, talks about his childhood winter Sunday. He remembers the early morning events and the extent to which his father explained his father's love for him. The man, when he was a child, realized that his father was not aware of his hard efforts to provide some basic essentials and some additional benefits.
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. Initially the poem did not seem to pay great respect to his father, but when we saw deeper, Hayden's praise and love for his father became clear. 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 reminded me of this diligent father in the cold dark. When Hayden wrote "Brain Injury" (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.
My son also remembered the hard work his father did for his family on "Sunday in winter": "The hands of work days will be hurt" Robert Hayden (line 3 - 4). Robert Hayden (line 1) said he said that the boy was very sad, saying, "My father got up even early rising Sunday." Both voices speak proudly, but the tones differ between them. Each talker talks about his father's memory, but their tone leaves two different impressions. The tone of each of the poems of the two narrator is different. "That winter Sunday" is a sad tone of guilt and sorrow. The way he treats his father is obviously disappointing and sad. I regret that he did not thank his father for "hand pain" (line 3) and "indifferent to him" (line 10).