English, asked by Muhammad7933, 1 year ago

Analysis of the cold within poem

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Answered by iamawesome05
2

Stanza 1-

Recreating a dark, the poet presents a scene where six persons are gripped in a bleak winter with each having a single stick of wood. Use of individuals rather than a group that means they are brought together by fate than their own free will.

He uses the term happenstance to lend it a sense of inevitability and bitter cold to elicit a feeling of dread in the reader’s mind.

Stanza 2-

The second stanza depicts a fire running out of fuel and in need to wood to burn. In the cold winter heat from the fire is critical to keep their bodies warm. All of them can survive if they use their stick one by one.

It is a time to come together. But the first man refrains from using it because it will benefit a black person too. Even at the cost of his own harm, he refuses to use the stick. That is the evil of racism.

Stanza 3 .

The second person sees someone who has different religious views than him. Therefore, he refuses to use his stick too. This shows religious intolerance and bigotry of faith.

This shows how consumed people can be in their condemnation of others who have different views. They would rather cause self-harm than bring any benefit to others.

Stanza 4

Now we move to the third person who comes from a poor background as he is wearing torn and worn out clothes. He evens tugs his cloth (hitch) a bit tighter because he is feeling severely cold.

He is carrying spite against people who are rich and well-off (idle) and refuses to use his stick to warm their bodies with his minimal means.

Stanza 5

Diametrically opposite to the poor man we come to the rich now. He is proud of his wealth and only worried about keeping his wealth safe from the poor. He keeps his stick away from the poor who he considers lazy.

Stanza 6

Now the chance falls to the black man, a victim of racism. But he is full of ill-will against his oppressors and in his desire for revenge is willing to let the fire die out. He is ready to perish as long as the people who abused him suffer too.

Stanza 7

Now the poet passes judgment over the group for the first time as he calls the last man selfish and opportunistic. Previously, he had reserved giving conclusions and letting readers decide but here he calls the group as forlorn and consumed by self-indulgence.

The poet calls this cycle of refusal to help others and take the initiative as a metaphorical game of life that all of them are about to lose.

 Stanza 8

Predictably we arrive at a grim ending in which all of them died. They did not succumb to the cold weather outside but perished because of their apathy toward each other.

Death is personified with ‘still hands’ as every man refused to act and save the entire group. The poet calls out their sin, opting to die with sticks in their hand than throwing it in the fire to save everyone. The last lines underline the irony of these men becoming agents of their own demise.

Key Thoughts:

The whole story is a stirring parable about the consequences of human follies like hate, prejudice, bigotry, and selfishness. Discrimination is the biggest of human sin which denotes a sense of coldness and insensitivity for other people’s pain.

It is the lack of empathy for others that makes us cold and dead from inside and it stops our human spirit from truly living and thriving. The poem is a clear critique of the futility of human attitude of discrimination, bias, and opportunism.

Hope it helps.

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