Summary of poem goodnigjt by Thomas hood
Answers
Explanation:
Stanza One
Stanza one begins with a command: "Do not go gentle into that good night." This first line can also be interpreted as an entreaty, with the speaker not just commanding but begging the reader not to go "gentle" into death, meaning not to give up without a fight. In this context, "night" is a metaphor for death, making "day" and "light" metaphors for life. Thomas expands on this metaphor in the second line, where the speaker proclaims that the elderly ("old age") should fight ("burn and rave") against death ("close of day") just as fiercely as if they were still young. Stanza one ends with the speaker's second command: "Rage, rage against the dying of the light." This deepens the metaphor of light as life and suggests that though the dying of the light (like the setting of the sun) is a perfectly natural phenomenon, people should still fight it. Everyone dies, the speaker knows, but that doesn't mean you have to go quietly. Thomas emphasizes this point by repeating these two commands throughout the poem.
Stanza Two
In stanza two, the speaker introduces the first of four different kinds of men: wise men. These wise men, like the speaker, understand that death is inevitable ("know dark is right"), but this intellectual conception of death can't change their nature ("their words had forked no lightning"), so even these wise men who know death is coming fight against it in the end.
Stanza Three
In stanza three, the speaker introduces a second group of men: the good men. These men are shown in their "last wave" (where "wave" means both the last stage of their life and the farewell wave they give to the ones they leave behind). "Crying" also has a double meaning, referring both to the act of crying out or shouting and to crying or weeping. These moral, upstanding men are upset because the good works ("frail deeds") they did in life were cut short, because they didn't do enough good work, and because what they did manage to accomplish didn't amount to much. At the end of stanza three, the speaker repeats the line, "Rage, rage against the dying of the light," indicating that the good men rage against death, just as the wise men do.
Stanza Four
In stanza four, the speaker introduces a third group of men: the wild men. The wild men lived life to the fullest ("caught and sang the sun in flight"), loving every minute of their time on earth, but were unaware that death is inevitable. As the speaker says, they are the kind of men who "learn, too late," that their revelry will end. So when death finally came "they grieved it on its way" and struggled to come to terms with it. Still, as a group, these wild men "do not go gentle into that good night," just like the wise men and the good men before them.
Stanza Five
In stanza five, the speaker introduces the last group of men: the grave men. In this context, the word "grave" refers both to men close to their graves ("near death") and to serious men. These grave men have the dubious gift of "blinding sight," which allows them to see when others have been blinded. These "blind eyes" used to "blaze like meteors" with energy and happiness, but now they have faded to the point of showing no fire or life at all. This is a horrifying sight for the grave men, and it inspires them to "rage, rage against the dying of the light."