Sunday, March 1, 2009

Elegy # 3

In the poem "Let's Go Back," Mary Jo Bang uses imagery to demonstrate her pain over the loss of her son.  She asks to go back in time to when her son was first born.  She remembers his birthday and how happy of an occasion it was.  She writes, "And now July, that ladder half-/ Birthday that marks nothing but a rake/ that pushes back the pack of wild dogs into a cage"(5-7).  The image of wild dogs being put away suggests that his birthday was one of the only times that her troubles in life were pushed away.  She valued his birthday as a pleasant break from life, but that was while he was alive.  She then changes to a scene where he dies.  She writes, "There is no worse/ Than this last act where you disappear/ Behind the curtain of addiction and catastrophe"(9-11).  She relates his death to the final act of a play where he is hidden behind a curtain; stricken from the play entirely.  The curtain of addiction and catastrophe suggests that his death was drug related.  Mary Jo Bang's use of imagery suggests the idea that life is only pleasant when you are young and innocent.
In the poem "Guilt," Mary Jo Bang uses tone to express the idea that death is an inevitable tragedy.  She tells how her sons death weighs on her mind, even though there was nothing she could do to help him.  Sh writes, "And him, perched in her mind,/ Never to be unbalanced again"(11-12).  She cannot stop thinking about her son.  He will be stuck in her mind and nothing will ever be able to take him out.  She continues to write about his death in the hospital.  She writes,"Never to be hospital bedded, mother loved./ Oh, he's peaceful now, they told her"(13-14).  She continues the dark tone by using the cliche of people being at peace.  She establishes a sad, hopeless tone by saying he will never be mother loved.  She's lost her son and is lamenting him.  Mary Jo Bang uses tone to establish the theme that death is an inevitable tragedy.

3 comments:

Tessa L-M said...

Is the whole book of poems about her dead son? If i were to read this book I think it would make me sad. the words and the imagery she uses in her work make the reader feel sad for her and her son that passed away. I do like the play/curtain imagery to her dead son, its creative and it clearly gets her point across.

Sean C. said...

The title "Lets Go Back" really helps the poem become a lot more powerful and I think really help illustrate the point the author is trying to make. She just wants to spend time with her son, and wants nothing more than for him to come back and spend some time with her. I think relating it to a magician on stage helps show how she doesn't understand why he did the things he did. She is just in shock over what happened.

camhoush said...

I thought that the imagery that Mary Jo Bang uses was very powerful, and made ever more so by the terrible subject of her son's death. I can only assume that he was killed as a child/young man, because she is talking about childish events like a birthday, which must be her only relation to him. Your point about how death is inevitable brings up an interesting question in that, if death is inevitable, then why do people mourn it and get so emotional about it?