Analytical Essay About Poem
“Seen From Above” by Wislawa Szymborska
Second Draft
Perceiving Real Importance
Does a beetle’s death require as much thoughtful consideration as a human’s? Is a beetle only less significant as a human due to the contrasting proportions? Does size matter at all? A dead beetle lies on a path through a field and is meditated on for only a glance. The passing person then continues the right of way. Wislawa Szymborska attempts to change our ideas of death to comprehend that even small things are relevant as shown in the poem, ‘Seen From Above,’ by utilizing the imagery of the dead beetle, through claiming death’s metaphorical right of way, and with the contrast of a deceased human and a dead animal. The
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The scene caused is revolting and therefore captivating. In contrast, the beetle dies with “tidiness and order.” Its legs are neatly crossed and no mess it produced. What the beetle signifies, is that meaningless things in life will nevertheless stay meaningless. As it is on a different level of importance, it will stay that way, no matter how orderly it actually is. Through the utilization of irony, the large physical contrast between the unlike deaths and the difference in the importance of the two things are clearly intelligible. One should learn to not just disregard small things, but to give them consideration as well. Every single thing has a history to it, which should not be ignored, but acknowledged with intention.
Through the metaphor claiming the right of way, Szymborska expresses that humans need to be more attentive and consider smaller things as well. After having discovered the beetle lying on her path, she meditates on what she believes is right. “Important matters are reserved for us, for our life, and our death, a death that always claims the right of way.” (19-21) This person clearly believes that the importance of humans is at a higher stage than that of an animal. The beetle is given one glance before it has becomes irrelevant history from the past. As this person is walking through the field, without any further thought after
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