Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Bone Dreams by Seamus Heaney Essay -- English Literature
Bone Dreams by Seamus Heaney ââ¬â An Analysis    Bone Dreams is an obscure and difficult poem to understand. In all my  searching on the internet, I found very little to help me in my  analysis of this poem and so the ideas are basically my own. I might  be wide of the mark, but for anybody struggling to understand this  poem, it might at least give you some ideas of your own. I make no  apology for asking questions or for sounding vague or even muddled in  places. I hope that this essay is of help to somebody, somewhere.    The poem begins in a thoughtful mood; the voice is relaxed, ââ¬Å"White  bone found/on the grazingâ⬠ suggesting that the speaker is walking in  the countryside when he discovers a piece of bone in the grass. He  uses tactile imagery to describe his find, the bone is ââ¬Å"rough, porousâ⬠  and has ââ¬Å"the language of touchâ⬠. This image would be powerful if not  for the mildness of the language, which conveys a musing quality in  its passivity, for example, ââ¬Å"foundâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"grazingâ⬠ - these words have  nothing of a hurry about them and suggest a peacefulness of mind in  the opening stanzas.    He continues to describe the piece of bone, making comparisons with a  ââ¬Å"ship-burialâ⬠ and notes the impressions in the grass as ââ¬Å"yellowing,  ribbedâ⬠. The word ââ¬Å"ribbedâ⬠ is suggestive, with its subject matter of  bone, to a rib-cage.    The bone takes on a significance which is greater than its intrinsic  worth ââ¬â which is nothing ââ¬â because the speaker equates it with  treasure; it is, ââ¬Å"flint-findâ⬠, a ââ¬Å"nugget of chalkâ⬠, the word nugget  being quite often associated with gold, and therefore he says it has a  value in itself. ââ¬Å"Flintâ⬠ suggests history, a link to the stone-age and  the find is, in fact, described as being, ââ¬Å"as dead as stoneâ⬠. So here  ...              ... little points were the eyesâ⬠, as if to  say that he had never really seen anything. Furthermore, if he is  ââ¬Å"identifyingâ⬠ with the English (if he is the mole) then this poem  could be about trying to see through the eyes of the invader and  coming to a new understanding through this identification process.    The closing lines are highly optimistic, as if the sun has come out  from being behind a very large, black cloud; ââ¬Å"I touched small distant  Pennines, /a pelt of grass and grain/running southâ⬠.    The final section as a whole is highly suggestive of discovery or of  realisation, of altered perception and of forgiveness for past sins.  The poem begins in Ireland with a piece of yellowing bone, but ends in  England with a dead mole. The bone found on Irish grass has taken him  through a series of thoughts and memories. At the end he seems altered  by the experience.                      
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