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Compare and Contrast the Poem "Father and Son" by Mary Nagy and the Excerpt "Father and Son" from the Odessey by Homer

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Compare and Contrast the Poem "Father and Son" by Mary Nagy and the Excerpt "Father and Son" from the Odessey by Homer
Ben Cooke
10-1-12
Period 7

For as long as fathers have had sons the bond has been a strong and awesome one. Its no wonder two authors from totally different periods of time have chosen this bond as their topic. After reading “Father and Son,” by both Homer and Mary Nagy the reader would be able to pick out a lot of differences and some similarities. The two stories tell about a father and son's relationship towards each other. The stories are very different from one another yet some what similar. Overall that both poems were about the bond between father and son.

Mary Nagy is a writer from more modern time and therefore uses language that is easier to read and understand. This was definitely one of the biggest differences the reader noticed between the two poems. Another big difference was that she wrote the poem from the mother's perspective. Not only did we get to see the father and son's feelings but the mother as well, her description of the father and sons bond really comes from her heart, this made her poem a lot more emotional than Homer's. Mary Nagy's poem is more of a real poem because she has more of a rhyme scheme, every other line rhymes throughout the entire poem. Finally, Mary Nagy does not give any of her characters names. I am not sure why except when some one reads her poem perhaps they can think of themselves as the father, son, or even the mother.

Homer's version was very different from Mary Nagy's. It was definitely harder to connect with the characters because this epic took place in the 5th century B.C. and not modern times. Most of this version is told through the perspective of Odysseus, who was a great warrior and therefore it doesn't seem as there is as much emotion in this version. Unlike Mary Nagy's description of a loving bond between father and son from childhood through adulthood, in Homer's epic there seems to be regret for a bond that hasn't been there between Odysseus and Telemachus. This is evident when

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