I want to
take this time to touch on a poem Abby and I covered during our poetry project.
The poem is The More Loving One by
W.H Auden. I really liked this poem, actually no, I loved this poem, because of
the theme it presents. The first lines, “Looking up at the stars, I know quite well / That, for all they care,
I can go to hell,” sets the tone of the poem as dark, pessimistic, and
uninviting. I agree that The More Loving
One has a tinge of sadness, but I feel it is more a disappointed tone:
disappointment in society, and disappointment in people.
W.H. Auden wrote this poem to express the indifference he felt people
showed towards others. He observed people did not care about other humans. They
cared, but only superficially. In The
More Loving One, he compares people to stars because of how distant stars
and people are. The line, “Of stars that do not give a damn,” strengthens
Auden’s metaphor. Metaphorically, Auden thinks people are as distant from
others as we are from the stars. I really connected to this theme because it
is something I also believe.
I believe people do not give a damn about others. We smile, act
friendly, and put on a show for those who we do not know too well. We have no
empathy. We have no emotion towards them: we could care less if they died, unless
they were our friend. Our true human connection has been lost, and replaced
with technology. We have Snapchat, texting, Instagram, Twitter, Skype, etc. to
communicate: we don’t really communicate with others. This technology has
allowed us to skip what past generations have been forced to do: communicate
with others face-to-face. They did not have the luxury of shooting a text to
their best friend to ask them how they are doing. People back then could not
“get to know someone” over text. No. They got to know someone by interacting
with them in real time. Although technology is amazing, we, as humans, have
lost the skill of bonding with people face-to-face.
Come to find out, W.H. Auden wrote this poem in 1957, reflecting on
the path society had been taking after World War II. Auden felt the growing
disconnect between people. Even though it was written in 1957, I feel The More Loving One is more relevant to
the present day, especially with the plethora of technology. W.H. Auden had it
right back in 1957.
Excellent post here, Scott. It's great to find a poem you connect with even if it encapsulates something tragic about ourselves as humans. You develop the idea well. It all reminds me of "The Hedgehog's Dilemma" explained here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedgehog's_dilemma
ReplyDeleteAlso, remember that if you begin a sentence with an independent clause, there is no need for the comma between that and the dependent clause. You made that mistakes a couple of times before the word "because." Just sayin'!