Rev.
Ronald Stuart Thomas’ poem ‘An Old Man’ is one of the shortest and beautiful
poems of his imagination but it is the best of its kind. His poems are
remarkably honest, realistic and sometimes very severe in suggestion. As a parson
R. S. Thomas is successful in this poem in bringing out the true difficulties of
‘the old age’ and exerting the public sympathy towards old people.
The
poem ‘An Old Man’ deals with the subject of approaching old age and its
difficulties. As the body decays and imminent death draws near, the old man
falters on the path of life and slowly succumbs to the ravages that life had
wrought on him. Metaphorically, the season ‘winter’ is taken to represent the time
of ‘old age’ and the poet requests ‘the winter’ to be kind enough towards old
men so that the severity of old age and death are allayed. The image of the
bridge that winter is asked to build presents the picture of man’s life as a
journey across the bridge of death to the world beyond.
The
poet asks us with a great concern to look at an old man reverentially who is
trying with slow foot on the wet road muffled with smoke. The old age, the last
stage of the life, is compared to winter as the last season of the year. The
old man is seen in this poem, walking slowly on the dangerous slippery icy
roads. The winter time is described as treacherous like the crust of ice on
roads, lakes or rivers. The icy roads are slippery and on lakes or rivers the
ice may break when stepped on letting the man fall into the icy water below. As
a person becomes old, the world becomes a dangerous place for him so he has to
tread carefully (live carefully). The tears on his cheeks resembling as the
last glitters on the bare branches of a tree whose foliage ravished in the long
storm. He asks the winter to build a bridge with its cold hands to walk slowly
and confidently across the deep depths like difficulties of his life to meet
his Death. The poem concludes with great revelation that all people on this
earth are shaped with a hard hammer of ‘Pain’ on the anvil of the ‘Time’ under
the Sun subjected to endure the difficulties of old age.
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