"Carl Sandburg's Motif of Blood as a Symbol of Both Life and Death" (Title pretty much nails it.) Didn't get as good a grade on this one. Lost pts for 1st sentence. Five Pages. American Poetry.

Essay by procrastinatedagainUniversity, Master'sA, December 2003

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Carl Sandburg's Motif of Blood as a Symbol of Both Life and Death

The image of the color red is presented in at least 25 of the poems of this collection. In some instances, red is a symbol of passion and life, but in others it is offered as a symbol of suffering, death, and waste. Sandburg frequently presents this motif with the image of blood, especially in War Poems. The blood image also has a dual meaning for Sandburg. He uses it to represent both life and death as well. While these two images are offered together in many instances, they are also presented as independent images even in the same poems in which they are combined to create a single motif. An analysis of this motif provides a clear view of Sandburg's struggle to reconcile his longing for both peace and progress, which must have seemed like a paradoxical ideal at the beginning of World War I.

The three poems that contain this motif are "Dynamiter," "Killers," and "Buttons."

In the poem "Dynamiter," Sandburg first uses the image of blood to describe life. He describes the dynamiter as "an unshakable man knowing life to be a rich and red-blooded thing" (Line 3). This dynamiter is described as a tough guy figure. "His name was in many newspapers as an enemy of the nation and few keepers of churches or schools would open their doors to him" (Line 5). Through a shared enthusiasm for "the red-blooded thing," or life, Sandburg finds common ground with this man who is considered by many to be "an enemy of the nation." The man is a "lover of life...lover of red hearts and red blood the world over" (Line 7). The hearts here are red because the color itself is a symbol of...