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Monday, February 11, 2019

Analysis of Blackberry Picking by Seamus Heaney Essay -- Blackberry Pi

Analysis of Blackberry filling by Seamus Heaney Once the reader can passes up the surface kernel of the poem Blackberry-Picking, by Seamus Heaney, past the emotional switch from sheer blessedness to utter disappointment, past the childhood memories, the underlying meaning can be quite disturbing. Hidden deep within the happy-go-lucky rifts of childhood is a disturbing tale of greed and murder. Seamus Heaney, through clever diction, ghastly imagery, lead metaphors and abruptly changing forms, ingeniously tells the tale that is understood and rarely communicate aloud. Seamus Heaney refers to Bluebeard at the end of stanza one. Bluebeard, according to the footnote, is a character in a fairy tale who murders his wives. Why on earth would there be a fictional character to a murderous pirate in a poem about blackberries? The exact metaphor is Our hand were peppered With thorn pricks, our palms sticking as Bluebeards, (lines 15-16). Heaney is comparing the sticky blackberry juic e on their hands to the blood shed on Bluebeards hands, from his wives. This comparison makes the first reference to murder in the poem, rather the most obvious one. Picking blackberries is macrocosm paralleled to greed and murder by Heaney, in this poem. Murdering the blackberries is an interesting thought. Once picked get through the bush out of greed, wanting the blackberries for yourself, the blackberries will only rot away, no longer able to sustain their lives. This murderous act is committed in the innocence of the sp...

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