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My Papa's Waltz

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Rik Wyatt

English 1102 B

6 Oct. 2003

Revealing Child Abuse in "My Papa's Waltz"

In Theodore Roethke's "My Papa's Waltz," the persona reveals an incidence of child abuse that happened earlier in his life. He divulges the occurrence of abuse through the use of certain words and noting the actions that go on during the "waltz." Through the use of graphic diction, Roethke informs the reader that "My Papa's Waltz" depicts an episode of child abuse.

The persona Roethke creates discloses the incidence of child abuse to the reader by using particular words in his poem. The persona says "I hung on like death: / such waltzing was not easy" to show he is being beaten badly but is still alive (Roethke 3,4). He also uses the phrase "battered on one knuckle" to describe his father's knuckles (10). The persona chooses the word "battered" in the phrase to describe his father's knuckles because it creates a realistic visual image of the beating. When a person is battering another person, his knuckles often become bruised. When the speaker's father misses steps, his son's "right ear [scrapes] a buckle," which shows that the father is projecting his frustration with himself onto his son (12); the father therefore punishes his son for his own incompetence. Either the father is inebriated from the whiskey and getting mad when he skips steps in the waltz with his son, or whenever the persona dodges one of his father's beat-up fists, his right ear scrapes his dad's belt buckle. One of the last words Roethke places in his poem to highlight the child abuse is "beat." The phrase "beat time on [the boy's] head" implies that the father is thrashing the son by hitting him in the head (13). Of all the words that could be employed, Roethke chooses "beat" because of the images of violence one would associate with child abuse. Another way Roethke exposes the mistreatment of the child by describing the actions of people in the poem.

Roethke goes into detail on certain actions of the characters in the poem to intimate to the reader that the poem addresses child abuse. The father drinks; "the whiskey on [his] breath / could make a small boy dizzy" insinuates

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