In Walter McDonald’s “Life with Father” and Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz,” the poets give insight into a dysfunctional childhood surrounded by alcoholism, which leaves a lasting impression on the children. The poets use dissimilar figurative language and expressive sound devices to evoke contrasting fearful tones; McDonald fears his father and Roethke fears losing his. The extensive and diverse use of figurative language in McDonald and Roethke’s poems captures the essence of growing up with
In Walter McDonald’s “Life with Father” and Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz”, the poets revisit their childhoods with alcoholic fathers. Through vivid imagery and metaphors, the poets create nearly inverted images- McDonald’s light-hearted terror and Roethke’s fearful joy- in remembering their fathers. McDonald and Roethke use imagery to describe scenes from their childhood in ways that evoke sympathy in readers. In the opening lines of “Life with Father”, McDonald’s first striking image is