William Stafford's Traveling Through The Dark

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William Stafford’s poem, “Traveling through the Dark,” recites a story concerning moral issues. Stafford composes a poem of the speaker traveling along a narrow road when he or she comes across a dead deer, which is still carrying a baby fawn. The moral issue of whether to save the baby fawn when no one is watching, or to simply push it into the river is the foundational question of this poem. Through the symbolism of the road, the car, and the darkness, the speaker experiences an intersection of the natural world and human moral reasoning. Stafford uses free verse and conversational language to communicate the poem’s themes of life’s unconventional journey and man’s power to decide. William Stafford tells a haunting and surprising tale of human morals while implementing symbolism and figurative language to express the lifelong journey one has with their inner integrity. Stafford utilizes free verse poetry when conveying his message in “Traveling through the Dark.” First, the poem is composed of four, 4-line stanzas, while finishing in a precise couplet. There is neither strict form nor rhyme scheme in the poem. Although there is not an obvious rhyme scheme, Stafford uses slant rhyme in second and fourth line of…show more content…
Stafford describes this road in line 4 as “…narrow; to swerve might make more dead.” In detail, the road is cumbersome to journey upon, which might result in easier swerving and death. Further in the poem, line 12 states, “Beside that mountain road I hesitated.” Here, Stafford connects how life’s journey is often one with hesitations and obstacles. In “Traveling through the Dark,” the speaker experiences the struggle of making a questionable decision when he or she comes across the dead doe. Stafford utilizes the narrow, dark road to symbolize life’s taxing quest. He continues with the analogy when displaying the theme of nature vs. man and moral

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