Another poem of Gwen Harwood “Father and Child” is similar to “The Glass Jar”. It also investigates the transition from chastity to experience, and a child’s understanding of the ineluctability of change. In addition, “Father and Child” shows the altered world that has appeared within the unknown persona by dividing the poem into two parts, “Barn Owl” and “Nightfall” to compare past and present, and depict the changes that have happened over time within herself and her father. This is reinforced through the obvious shift in tone within “Barn Owl” and “Nightfall”. The starting proud and impudent tone strengthens the personal resistance, later shifting to an ashamed and frightened tone and then to a warmer tone described in “Nightfall”. By the child deciding to ruin the owl and withstand her father the child initiates change; she loses her chastity and is confronted instead with severe realities of suffering and death. This is continued through the comparison of a “horny fiend” with “angel-mild”, which offers the loss of chastity. Through the images of the owl’s death that was very painful, the persona is made realize that people can be brutal and blind confronted with the quiet and peaceful images in “Nightfall”.
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