Monday, May 27, 2019

Ted Hughes ‘Wodwo’ and ‘Crow’s Account of the Battle’

Hughess poe try constitutes a moral project. It demands that we see our world and ourselves differently. Discuss. Together, genus Corvuss billhook of the Battle and Wodwo by Ted Hughes detail aspects of human nature that Hughes is vocation the readers to reflect upon from external viewpoints. Hughes is asking a generation exposed to the horrors of war, the final stage caused by the atomic bombs and the Nazi holocaust to look such pointless destruction and how so much of it is caused by our alienation from the complete being of the universe.He demands that we get wind what it is all conscious beings feel we argon missing, and fill that void by connecting to the inborn world and through art and poetry. Crows Account of the Battle shows the effects of our alienation and its disastrous consequences, but also asks us to examine these from the extracurricular strainingar perspective of Crow. Wodwo is a meter showing the first stages of alienation caused by self consciousness an d its possible dangers.Finally, together these poems allow us to examine ourselves objectively, and understand what it is that Hughes is demanding we must do to survive our dangerous hubris. Crows Account of the Battle is a disturbing picture of human coldness told from the neutral perspective of Hughess Crow. While the Crow figure features in m all of Hughess poetry in order to provide an objective viewpoint, we can calm down see in this poetry Hughess own disapproving feelings about war in the tone of the poem, This had expireed too often before/ And was going to happen to often in the future.The nature of the word Account in the title is very scientific in itself, and the lack of metre in the poem accentuates the tone of a report. There are no agencies in this poem, we encounter human parts such as ear, eyes, intestines, brains, hair and teeth but there are no sides, all Crow sees are humans at war. Also, the verbs sport no subjects attached to them, cartridges were banging of f/the fingers were guardianship things going.This lack of human presence also helps to remove any emotion, as Hughes can refer to not just the world wars, but any war in history, and therefore emphasise and demonstrate to us the cycle of destruction into which humans alone created and will continue to fall in to. Wodwo is a stream of consciousness poem detailing a creatures first moments of conscious being. As the creature becomes aware of itself and its surroundings, it also becomes anomic from its environment, Do these weeds k equivalent a shot me do I fit in their world? Hughes constantly suggests, but particularly in Wodwo, that our consciousness causes us to be alienated from our surroundings and that we will immediately cast down searching for this sense of belonging. We can clearly see this in the Wodwo, and in the final line again very queer but Ill go on looking ending with no full stop, suggests that like humans it will now spend its whole life searching for what it fe els is missing. However, in relation to Crows Account of the Battle, he also suggests this brings danger as we begin to perceive our world as beneath us since we make been given freedom of thought.The early stages of this danger are shown in Wodwo, I seem to have been given the freedom of this place and I suppose I am the exact centre, while the final, cataclysmic stages of it are demonstrated in Crows Account of the Battle. While the Wodwo has appeared to have only recently stopped existing and started being, Hughes demonstrates the catastrophic moral consequences this alienation can have, which are further examined in Crows Account of the Battle.While Crows Account of the Battle is presented as the probable future of the creature in Wodwo, both poems still contain explicit references to the fundamental existential questions that we are constantly trying to explain. Wodwo is the very example of such questions, the very word Wodwo sounds like an interrogative because of the w sound s and the first line is a perfect example of a conscious beings fundamental question- What am I? Again, Crows Account of the Battle is the evolution of such thoughts, but instead of asking these questions, the beings have started trying to explain them. We have a reference here to Universal Laws, traps of potassium bitartrate and theorems (i. e. comprehension) but also pocket-books, life-mask and many prayers (i. e. religion). However, since both of these explanations have been reached, and they are still in the middle of a pointless and immoral war and therefore are still trying to find what is missing, Hughes asserts that neither of these is the answer. If we return to the Wodwos origins, efore it became conscious, its surroundings are those of nature- we have leaves, rivers, weeds and roots rather than anything artificial. This, then, is what Hughes is suggesting is the answer. That we return to nature and try to reconnect with the whole being of the universe. He suggests that it is only then that we will discover what is missing and rediscover our potential to exist in harmony with all of the forces of nature. In conclusion, Hughes writes such poems as Wodwo and Crows Account of the Battle to warn us of our inherent hubristic view of the natural world.He asks us to step outside ourselves and consider the reasons that we have become alienated, and how we have further extended our alienation by seemingly chronically searching for answers in the wrong places. Hughes is critical of both science and religion, of how we have used fundamental universal laws to our own advantage almost always for destruction, and of how religion persistently places humans over all other beings. He instead asks us to connect with nature, or The White Goddess (the original Goddess, worshipped under many names, who encompassed the whole being of the universe) in order to rediscover that which we have lost.

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