Saturday, October 12, 2019
Tragedy in Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s Sunflower Sutra and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ Small Change :: Sunflower Sutra
Tragedy in Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s Sunflower Sutra and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ Small Change In both Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Sunflower Sutraâ⬠and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠, tragedy is the major premise for the sad and melancholy tone the authors share. In his poem, Ginsberg describes the fall of a mighty flower, the sunflower. Once a bright yellow beacon of life, it now is ââ¬Å"broken like a battered crown.â⬠Having been covered by the dirt and grime of industry, by human ââ¬Å"ingenuity,â⬠this sunflower is really representing a demise in humanity. Rather than choosing nature as a prime example for life, choosing the ââ¬Å"perfect beauty of a sunflower,â⬠we have chosen industry and technology, and have forgotten that we are flowers. Ginsberg berates the dust and grime which have rained down from the locomotives onto ââ¬Å"my sunflower O my soulâ⬠and wonders ââ¬Å"when did you forget you were a flower?â⬠This poem really is not about a flower, but the tragedy of losing oneââ¬â¢s inner beauty, the vivacity an d brightness which makes one shine. Thus Ginsberg delivers his ââ¬Å"sermon of my soulâ⬠to whoever shall listen in hopes that we, unlike the sunflower, do not turn gray in despair and gloom but shine brightly among the soot of the world we live in (Ginsberg 36-37). Similarly to ââ¬Å"Sunflower Sutra,ââ¬Å" the lyrics from ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠pose a tragedy, which, though more concrete of a scene, shares all the gloom and weariness of the gray sunflower. In a Ginsberg-esque lyrical style, Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ rambles through his lyrics (his mind), posing vivid descriptions of the depths of life. His victim is not a flower, but someone by the name of ââ¬Å"Small Change,â⬠who, when killed by his own thirty-eight, gains the headstone of a ââ¬Å"gumball machineâ⬠on the street. The real tragedy in this song lies in the first line of the third verse: ââ¬Å"And no oneââ¬â¢s gone over to close his eyes.â⬠Though there is enough cruelty in the world to kill ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠for a ââ¬Å"fistful of dollars,â⬠there is not enough kindness to shut his eyes to the cruelty which has slain him. Tragedy in Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s Sunflower Sutra and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ Small Change :: Sunflower Sutra Tragedy in Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s Sunflower Sutra and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ Small Change In both Allen Ginsbergââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Sunflower Sutraâ⬠and Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠, tragedy is the major premise for the sad and melancholy tone the authors share. In his poem, Ginsberg describes the fall of a mighty flower, the sunflower. Once a bright yellow beacon of life, it now is ââ¬Å"broken like a battered crown.â⬠Having been covered by the dirt and grime of industry, by human ââ¬Å"ingenuity,â⬠this sunflower is really representing a demise in humanity. Rather than choosing nature as a prime example for life, choosing the ââ¬Å"perfect beauty of a sunflower,â⬠we have chosen industry and technology, and have forgotten that we are flowers. Ginsberg berates the dust and grime which have rained down from the locomotives onto ââ¬Å"my sunflower O my soulâ⬠and wonders ââ¬Å"when did you forget you were a flower?â⬠This poem really is not about a flower, but the tragedy of losing oneââ¬â¢s inner beauty, the vivacity an d brightness which makes one shine. Thus Ginsberg delivers his ââ¬Å"sermon of my soulâ⬠to whoever shall listen in hopes that we, unlike the sunflower, do not turn gray in despair and gloom but shine brightly among the soot of the world we live in (Ginsberg 36-37). Similarly to ââ¬Å"Sunflower Sutra,ââ¬Å" the lyrics from ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠pose a tragedy, which, though more concrete of a scene, shares all the gloom and weariness of the gray sunflower. In a Ginsberg-esque lyrical style, Tom Waitsââ¬â¢ rambles through his lyrics (his mind), posing vivid descriptions of the depths of life. His victim is not a flower, but someone by the name of ââ¬Å"Small Change,â⬠who, when killed by his own thirty-eight, gains the headstone of a ââ¬Å"gumball machineâ⬠on the street. The real tragedy in this song lies in the first line of the third verse: ââ¬Å"And no oneââ¬â¢s gone over to close his eyes.â⬠Though there is enough cruelty in the world to kill ââ¬Å"Small Changeâ⬠for a ââ¬Å"fistful of dollars,â⬠there is not enough kindness to shut his eyes to the cruelty which has slain him.
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