![]() ![]() ![]() The repetition inherent in the structure also adds to the urgency of the speaker’s tone and makes the introduction of the speaker’s father in the final verse more poignant, as it deviates from the pattern of lines about “wise men,” “good men,” “wild men,” and “grave men” in the preceding stanzas. Jason argues that the “villanelle is often used, and properly used, to deal with one or another degree of obsession.” The repetitiveness inherent in villanelles suggests this obsessiveness, and Thomas’s poem is no different, as the speaker calls on the dying to take on an obsessive concern with fighting death. In a discussion of Sylvia Plath’s “Mad Girl’s Love Song,” Philip K. Villanelles, which originated in the ballads of late medieval French poetry, are uncommon in modern poetry. What is the impact of the poem’s structure? ![]()
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