Robert Hayden Essay

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    Love, in any form, is such that people find ways of celebrating it. The American poet Robert Hayden honors this compelling emotion in the poem “Those Winter Sundays.” “Those Winter Sundays” is a fourteen-line literary work that gives a description of an event from the speaker’s past. Although the poem is a short description of an event past, much information can be read between the lines of few words. Freelance writer Jeannine Johnson characterizes Hayden’s work to honor “the value of love’s simple

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    In the poem “ The Whipping” by Robert Hayden a boy gets chased and physically abused by an old woman. The speaker sees and listens on how the old women is hitting the child. And visualizes the abuse that he also went through when he was child. Throughout the poem there was metaphors, alliterations,and imagery to interpret the theme of the poem. The poem shows how violence with violence is not a solution that will stop the problem right away but it will make the situation to continue over and over

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    Whipping” by Robert Hayden Whether it be as small as an argument, or as traumatizing as abuse, people struggle with issues involving family at some point in their lifetime. The poem, “The Whipping” by Robert Hayden, tells exactly that. As a young boy, Hayden moved from family to family as a foster child. One family in particular traumatized him to the point where he still has not forgiven them. With each new family, Hayden experienced new forms of abuse. “The Whipping” by Robert Hayden gives insight

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    loss has the power to bring out people’s innermost behavior, and this is why Robert Hayden uses it to reach out to the best in humanity. If a mother was to realize that she was losing her child, she’d do whatever it took to prevent it. And if she lost him, she’d need a lifetime to come to terms with it. But she would feel worse knowing that her child existed somewhere, in a place she couldn’t reach and knew nothing of. Hayden, with his most fascinating technique, managed to channel his personal experience

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    Although the majority of Robert Hayden's writings address racial themes and depicts events in African-American history, he also wrote short poems that capture his own personal experiences. Hayden has an enormous amount of great poems and short stories, but as I read through many of them, I was touched by two specific poems that I felt I could personally relate to. I chose these poems because I am able to put myself into the story-line and understand what the writer is talking about. I believe that

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    To illustrate, Robert Hayden wrote a poem titled, “Frederick Douglass.” Hayden expressed the chance in the world by writing, “...this man shall be remembered… with the lives grown out of his life, the lives fleshing his dream of the beautiful, needful thing” (Hayden 81). Robert Hayden demonstrated the importance of Frederick Douglass by showing the readers he made a difference. For instance, Douglass

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    Michelle Spittler Monteiro – Summer 2015 ENGL 1302 6/8/2015 Child Abuse Exposed Robert Hayden’s “The Whipping” is a well-written poem that reveals the disturbing issue of child abuse from the unusual perspective of the abuser and the spectator. The author saw this happen with his own eyes and his account is not meant to be beautiful, but raw and vivid to evoke emotion. This poem is about a young boy who is being beaten with a stick by an overweight woman. A neighbor, the narrator, remembers back

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    a postmodern poet, yet Robert Hayden did just that in his poem, “Those Winter Sundays.” The poet utilizes his own alienation as a tool to reveal an insider’s view on the issues of his time. Robert Hayden was born in a poor suburb outside Detroit on August 4, 1913. His name at birth was Asa Bundy Sheffey. He was raised, however, as Robert Hayden, the name given by his foster parents. Hayden’s foster parents happened to live across the street from where Hayden was born. Hayden did not discover the story

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    important message. In “Those Winter Sundays” Robert Hayden demonstrates the importance of family and meaningful relationships through imagery to express the effects of his father’s past actions on his future. Hayden uses visual and auditory imagery throughout the poem to illustrate his father’s actions. For example he creates an image of his father when he says “Sundays…my father…in the blueblack cold, then with cracked hands…When the room was warm, he’d call.” Hayden is creating an image of his father waking

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    family as an institution survived. Langston Hughes and Robert Hayden show the power of connection, love, and learning between the Black parent and the Black child. Many Black poets write about the Black experience in America, but few capture the interactions between Black parent and Black child the way Langston Hughes and Robert Hayden do in their poems “Mother to Son” and “Those Winter Sundays”, respectively. Langston Hughes and Robert Hayden use metaphors and imagery to portray the lessons Black

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