Those Winter Sundays
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Transcript of Those Winter Sundays
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ThoseThose WinterWinter SundaysSundays
RobertHayden
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Robert Hayden (1913-Robert Hayden (1913-1980)1980)
• Born August 4th, 1913 as Asa Bundy Sheffey in Detroit, Michigan and was taken into a foster family
• Was raised in a slum called Paradise Valley (Detroit’s ghetto)
• Known for his poems that express African-American experience
• Attended Detroit City College• Married Erma Morris in 1940• In 1976, he was appointed
consultant to the Library of Congress, becoming the first African American poet to receive this honor.
• In 1980, Hayden died of heart failure
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Those Winter SundaysThose Winter SundaysSundays too my father got up early and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,then with cracked hands that achedfrom labor in the weekday weather madebanked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.
I'd wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.When the rooms were warm, he'd call,and slowly I would rise and dress,fearing the chronic angers of that house,
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Those Winter SundaysThose Winter Sundays
Speaking indifferently to him,who had driven out the coldand polished my good shoes as well.What did I know, what did I knowof love's austere and lonely offices?
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Those Winter Sundays, Video Recording
Those Winter Those Winter SundaysSundays
By Kelly Gugan
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The SpeakerThe Speaker• The son/daughter of the father• Probably is his son
– (“and polished my good shoes as well”)• He is an adult now, looking back onto what
his father had done for him in the past• He realizes now how he wasted his childhood
not recognizing the little things that his father did
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The Attitude of the The Attitude of the Speaker Toward his FatherSpeaker Toward his FatherA Subtle Love – building fires in the early morning that “drove out the cold”
Fear– (“fearing the chronic angers of that house”) –
implies that his family fought a lot
* Regret – the boy didn’t understand the significance his father had until later in his life
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The Poem’s OrganizationThe Poem’s Organization
• 3 stanzas– 2 stanzas with 5 lines– 1 quatrain
• Loose blank verse
• Length of the sentences vary
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The Poem’s OrganizationThe Poem’s Organization
• The first stanza, Lines 1-5– Establishes the subject, the speaker’s father– Focused upon the father’s suffering– The father sacrifices himself to get up early,
work, and warm the home for his family– Ends with a very powerful line, “No one ever
thanked him.”• The speaker never acknowledged his fathers’ actions
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The Poem’s OrganizationThe Poem’s Organization
• The second stanza, Lines 6-9– Once warmth is achieved, the father calls his
son to rise and get dressed– Mentions “chronic angers” in the household
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The Poem’s OrganizationThe Poem’s Organization• The third stanza, Lines 10-14
– Begins with the image of distance as a continuation of the last line of the second stanza (“speaking indifferently to him”)
– But also mentions that he was ungrateful for the things his father did
– Speaker admits his ignorance over the simple love for his father (“…what did I know of love’s austere and lonely offices”)
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ImageryImagery• Cracked hands
– Implies the rough labor that the father went through
• Sunday– Typically is a day of rest… Shows that the
father got up early to do things for the family regardless of the day
• Fire– Shows a contrast with “blueblack cold”– Shows a sense of liveliness and anger as well
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Diction and SyntaxDiction and Syntax
• Straight-forward language• Progression between the contrast of dark/cold and
light/warm throughout the poem1st Stanza (father getting up):
“blueblack cold” in contrast to “banked fires blaze”
2nd Stanza (son waking up):
“cold, splintering, breaking” in contrast to “the rooms were warm”
- Could symbolize a similar relationship between the father and son
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Diction and SyntaxDiction and SyntaxSundays too my father got up
early and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,then with cracked hands that achedfrom labor in the weekday weather madebanked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.
I'd wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.When the rooms were warm, he'd call,and slowly I would rise and dress,fearing the chronic angers of that house,
• The word choice in the first 2 stanzas emphasizes the hard “c” sound, which could symbolize the pain of the father and of the household
• Uses alliteration as well to make the poem “sound” smooth
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Diction and SyntaxDiction and Syntax 3rd Stanza: Speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the coldand polished my good shoes as well.What did I know, what did I knowof love's austere and lonely offices?
• The diction in the last stanza is a lot more calm and relaxed compared to the first two stanzas, as conveyed in the meaning of the final stanza (a sense of love/remembrance)
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ConclusionsConclusions• “Those Winter Sundays” is about an adult who is
looking back at his past relationship with his father. He now recognizes the extremity to which his father did things for him even within the angry household. The speaker regrets not recognizing the habitual actions that his father did for him while he was young.
• The title is significant in that it describes the typical winter Sundays that the speaker’s father would do things for him and how, in his youth, he never appreciated any of it.
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Bibliography
For Background Information:– "Robert Hayden." Poets.Org. Academy of
American Poets. 16 Apr. 2008 <http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/196>.
– Kennedy, and Gioia. "Robert Hayden." Pearson Longman. 16 Apr. 2008 <http://wps.ablongman.com/long_kennedy_lfpd_9/0,9130,1490011-,00.html>.