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FREE ESSAY ON SEAMUS HEANEY'S ST. KEVIN AND THE BLACKBIRD

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SEAMUS HEANEY'S ST. KEVIN AND THE BLACKBIRD

Poetry is, more or less, up for interpretation. Most poetry is not written like a novel,
it
does not tell a specific story and give you all of the details you need to decipher it.
A
poem is there for the reader to interpret on his or her own. After recently reading
Seamus
Heaney's poem, St. Kevin and the Blackbird, I have taken my own understanding of it,
which could be completely different from any one of my classmates' understandings.
Coming from a Christian background, rather than a Catholic background, I will
have a different interpretation than my Catholic classmates. Catholicism and
Christianity
are similar, but in Christianity, there are no prominents saints, therefore I have very
little
background on the actual story of St. Kevin. This is the first, and probably biggest
difference in interpretation between readers.
In the first four stanzas, the reader is put in St. Kevin's place. All the sensations,
the thoughts, that are going through his mind are put into the mind of the reader. The
reader can almost feel what it's like to have the blackbird in his or her hand. The
reader
can sense the link to "eternal life" - one cycle that has already begun is using him as a
link
to the next cycle of birds that is just about to begin. When Heaney speaks of pity, the
reader knows the feeling and can empathize with the feeling of St. Kevin, stuck with his
hand out until the eggs have hatched and the birds have flown away.
The next stanza was critical to my own personal reading of this poem. Not having
any sort of Catholic background, this paragraph, concerning the reality of the poem,
showed me that this is only a story, and that it was not merely a poem of fiction. By
asking the reader to imagine because "the whole thing is imagined anyhow", it tells me
that this is a tale that has been told many times. The author asks the reader to think
about
being Kevin. Linked to the previous 4 stanzas, the reader has already imagined themself
as Kevin, with or without realizing it, and this stanza is no different. Connecting to
the
next stanza, the reader thinks of the mental and physical feelings that would come with
having your arm stuck straight out for such a prolonged period of time.
This next stanza speaks first of the physical pain, and ends with ideas of not pain,
but caring and compassion. As I was reading through this paragraph, I also thought of
how I would feel. Would I concentrate more on the pain? Or would I think nothing more
of it than a good deed? I actually put myself more in the position of a statue than the
position of a living, feeling human being, and therefore felt more like it would just be
thoughts of love for the living world. These questions led me to take my morals into
consideration and unconsciously make a decision as to how I view what St. Kevin is
doing.
The last stanza sums up the latter part of the poem. In reading this last stanza, I
realized that a saint such as St. Kevin was, wouldn't think at all of the pain, but make
a
wholehearted prayer to the Lord, and in that forget himself, and sacrifice his arm for
the
sake of those tiny eggs, soon to be blackbirds.

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