Poems
Poems
For this paper I will be discussing three poems. They are Wood Butcher by Norman Hindley, Behind Grandmaâs House by Gary Soto, and Manners by Elizabeth Bishop. I will be examining the common theme I found throughout the three poems. I found that to be how the relatives teach lessons to their relation of a younger generation and the different approaches to their teaching.
To start off I will discuss the Wood Butcher by Norman Hindley. I believe the way the father taught the son was some what like an apprenticeship. The line âI was your helper, and that first year We worked weekends through most of winterâ gave me the impression that it was a watch and learn experience rather than explaining it.
Take note of how the father approached the mistakes made by his son. âI fouled up some screens once, âŠYou broke them out with a chairâ I feel showed the negative feeling I got when I read the poem. That also makes me believe that it was an apprenticeship. To me parents even if they get upset at something you do, donât go about things in that matter. The son was trying to learn something from his father and rather than explaining and showing the son how to do it correctly or the mistakes he made the father destroys the work.
Now onto the second poem which is Behind Grandmaâs House by Gary Soto. The grandmotherâs approach to teaching her grandson a lesson is to beat it out of him. The poem clearly states âpunched me between the eyesâ which is different from the fatherâs approach in the Wood Butcher. She treated her grandson the way he was treating everything else. She wanted to set him strait and actually teach him a lesson. That was proven in the words âLet me help you.â The father from the Wood Butcher seemed almost annoyed because he didnât take the time to fix the mistakes. That was demonstrated in the line âwavy framesâŠYou broke them out with a chair.â At most he tells his son it over and over rather than showing him. âMeasure twice, cut once. You said it a hundred timesâ I believe that maybe if he would have showed him it, it would have been different.
In the third poem, Manners by Elizabeth Bishop the grandfather takes a non-violent approach. The grandfatherâs teaching method is to tell his grandson exactly how to act. âMy grandfather said to me as we sat on the wagon seat, âBe sure to remember to always speak to everyone you meetââ showed his direct approach. The grandfather also practiced what he preached. The line âGood day, sir. Good day. A fine dayâ proved that he really did speak to everyone he met. This is just one example, after every manner lesson he gave his grandson it gave an example of him actually doing it. I believe that this method worked the best. At the beginning it was the grandfather that spoke towards the end it turned to âwe shouted âGood day!ââ It even states that they both have good manners at the end. I found proof to that in the line âas our good manners required.â
All three of these poems had different teaching methods for the younger generation. In the Wood Butcher the father was not really straightforward or vocal about it. Like I stated earlier when his son made mistakes rather than telling or showing him what he did wrong the father instead