There are two main images that are used as two tools with the same purpose in the poem Digging by Seamus Heaney. At the beginning of the poem, Heaney uses the shovel to exemplify hard manual labor. The “spade,” as he calls it, is used by his father to plant potatoes and by his grandfather to dig down to the retrieve the best peat.
The image I used to represent th

The way that both his father and his grandfather use the shovel leaves the speaker in awe of their skill. The speaker however, does not possess equal skill with the spade. He does his work with a pen. However, much like his grandfather used the spade for digging down to get the best peat the speaker uses his pen to dig down to express emotions through his writing. Not only this but the pen also acts as a way to plant things much like the shovel. Unlike the shovel, however, the pen will plant ideas rather than crops.
The image I used to show the author's use of the pen is one of a hand, armed with a pen, drawing itself. T

These connected images are heavily used throughout the poem to reflect the author’s point that people can use different tools to make an impact on the world. Whereas the speaker’s family has, in the past, used farming as a way to feed and warm people and to make a living, the speaker, himself will use his pen to reach out to people and to express his own emotions. The pen in this poem acts as the speaker’s shovel, capable of piercing the surface level to get to something deeper. He describes his grandfather as “going down, down/For the good turf. Digging.” This is exactly what the speaker hopes to do with the pen that acts as his shovel. He wants to get to the best emotions, the best feelings in order to make his work better.
1 comment:
I like how when you were describing the image of the hands both drawing each other, you wrote, "[the image]is one of a hand, armed with a pen, drawing itself". The fact that you chose to say that the hand was "armed" with a pen is smart because it goes along with the Seamus Heaney's idea that the pen is mighty and can be compared to the might of a gun. "The squat pen rests; snug as a gun," Heaney wrote in his poem "Digging".
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