Sunday, October 13, 2019
Ben Jonsons On My First Sonne Essay -- Poem Ben Jonson First Sonne Es
Ben Jonson's On My First Sonne      Ben Jonson writes On My First Sonne from a fatherââ¬â¢s point of view  grieving over the death of his very young son. The title alone  suggests which time period this poem is from i.e. it is from the 17th  century (1603)- when the poetââ¬â¢s son Benjamin died- through the use of  language of the time. This poem has been written in memory of a seven  year old child whose death has dealt a great blow to a father.  Throughout the poem, the use of religious comparisons and words  creates a vivid picture of the thoughts running in the mind of Ben  Jonson and we know almost exactly what he feels.    The inter-relation of father and son in this piece of poetry leads us  back to the beginning of the poem. The son, sitting on the right hand  of his father, would remind a Christian reader of the Creed, in which  the Son 'sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty; From  thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.' What others  would interpret from the line-ââ¬Å"Farewell, thou child of my right hand,  and joy;â⬠ is that a father is bidding farewell to his most loved one  and his heir.    Again in line 2, when the poet says ââ¬Å"My sinne was too much hope of  thee, lovââ¬â¢d boyâ⬠, the poem suggests that Ben had taken his son much  for granted as if now he possessed him and so loved him too much. It  is ironical as he is comparing the love towards his son as a sin. As  mentioned, he now considered that, love, his ââ¬Å"sinâ⬠ which has a deep  meaning from a religious point of view. A sin, in the eye of GOD is a  bad deed but in this case means a mistake or an error. The language  used, hence in relation with religion, exclaims Ben Jonsonââ¬â¢s sorrow  and love for the child; despite the fact that he is in a way happy  ...              ...es of the poem.    Contrastingly, in Refugee Mother and Child, the mother still showed  her love and affection towards the child in the last few days. She  cannot let go as easily. Most mothers would in this situation have  lost hope and would have ââ¬Å"ceased / to careâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬  but not her. She would  ââ¬Ëfightââ¬â¢ this sorrow till the end.    Both poems hence clearly depict the true feelings about the death of a  child. We get the perspective from two points of view in either case  i.e. from a motherââ¬â¢s and a fatherââ¬â¢s point of view and the feeling  before and after the death of a child. The language used is very  specific and has been used in the most appropriate contexts. Sorrow  and remorse are the main themes of both poems along with death of a  child, yet there is another shadow of a theme i.e. the ââ¬Ësinââ¬â¢ of loving  the child so much which causes almost endless grief in the end.                        
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