Analysis Of Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night

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Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night” is a poem about a son’s bereavement and the acceptance of his father dying. The poem is significant in many different ways, with the most being that this poem urges fighting and anger when it comes to death. It makes clear that by showing strange attitude by describing the rage and resistance to death. To give up life is the coward's way of going about. His father who is dying from a long-drawn-out illness, Dylan says to show his love because there is nothing wrong to cry even though he has never seen his father show the weakness of crying, just so long as he continues to fight against the coming end. Thomas knows death is inevitable, therefore, he uses persuasion to get his father to "rage, rage against…show more content…
Thomas’ two interchangeable rhyming sentences ending with night and light show the reader “Wise men at their end know dark is right” (4). However when death approaches, “their words had forked no lightning” (5). What this means is that death just as they know is a part of life and they acknowledge this, however when it is their turn they want to put up a fight. Their reason is that they still need to make an impact in this world we live in because to them, they did not do enough while they were alive. The same holds true for the men with weaker actions. They also believe they don’t want to pass on until they can leave this world a knowing feeling that they did everything to they could to live their lives to the…show more content…
With the lines, “Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight/do not go gentle into that good night” (10, 12). “Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and by gay” (14), they reflect how these type of mine might have lived happier lives. With doing good deeds in one’s life but does not fulfill all of his wishes and thinks about it for the rest of his life until the end is near give reasons to any man to fight for more time, even if they know it’s too late. Even a man who spends his whole life sightless gets clarity with “blinding site” as the end approaches. If a blind man chooses to fight till the end, then Thomas feels his father should do the same as well. Going through this while your father is alive is neither an easy feeling nor task to handle. While frustration takes over, Thomas orders his father to “Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears, I pray” (17). Thomas is irritated and wants his father to stand up and fight, even if it means letting it all out on him. Towards the end of the poem with Thomas being livid, he goes back to speaking openly to his father. Even though he may very well be a man but still is very scared of losing his dad, Thomas knows that the unavoidable is coming and there is nothing he can do about
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