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For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God - Retreating Into A Cold Night

The end our road that is life, is death and the second we begin to live, we begin to die. A rendition of death and the loss of a loved one is expressed in two different lights in Dylan Thomas' "Do not go gentle into that Good Night" and Anne Sexton's "for Eleanor Boylan talking with God". Both express the fear and vulnerability of losing someone you thought should live forever Thomas' message is an imperative one a dark and tangible energy whereas Sexton's tone is more passive and quiet and more driven by sorrow than anger. But as there is an underlying sense of sorrow in Thomas' villanelle, there is also a sense of quiet anger.



In "For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God", Sexton expresses the pain of losing a loved one. There is a surreal quality to the poem, Sexton seems to write as she thinks with a thought inciting a memory; she communicates her feelings in a very literal concrete way but the poem is still very abstract because there is so little linking these images,......


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Approximate Word Count: 1154
Approximate Pages: 5 (250 words per double-spaced page)

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  1. For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God - Retreating Into A Cold Night

    For Eleanor Boylan Talking With God - Retreating Into A Cold Night. The end our
    road that is life, is death and the second we begin to live, we begin to die. ...