Robert Hayden’s poem “Those Winter Sundays” describes a son’s feelings as he remembers his father. It is evident that the speaker of the poem and his father were not close, and that little communication passed between the two, but the speaker realizes, upon remembering the winter Sunday mornings of his youth, that his father’s love was communicated through his actions. The poem mourns the idea that the son, who did not notice his father’s expressions of love, never returned them.
The poem begins with a line that sets the tone of the poem and establishes the subject. The father is developed here as well, portrayed as the one who is up working in the quiet of a cold early morning. His efforts and sacrifice are shown through a description of his hands, which are now aching and cracked from outdoor labor. The father’s sacrifice is important to the overall message of the poem. Then we learn that the father’s caring actions went unnoticed, as the first stanza comes to a close with the line, “no one ever thanked him.” Here, a shift from father to son occurs, and a sense of regret becomes apparent.
Hayden utilizes the sound of hard c’s to tie the stanza together. The consonant sound is repeated in the words clothes, blueblack, cold, cracked, ached, weekday, banked, and thanked. The sounds are very subtle, but each repetition brings a recollection of the images that came before. One could almost argue that the repetition of this sound is purposefully meant to resemble the cracking and popping of wood as a fire starts. Using phrases such as “weekday weather,” and “banked fires blaze,” Hayden utilizes alliteration to give the poem a sense of flow and style.
The consonant sounds continue into the second stanza when the speaker hears the “cold splintering, breaking.” Once the cold is slowly fading away, and warmth envelopes the house, the speaker wakes and performs the same tasks his father performed in the beginning lines of the poem. The similarity in the actions of the two characters connects father and son. The second stanza also ends with a powerful line in which the speaker introduces “chronic anger” into the calm and warm house. No further detail is given about the nature of the unrest that seems to trouble the speaker, but the reader can be certain that anger was a constant inhabitant of the house.
The last stanza shows that the son’s indifference to his father was ungrateful. No detail is given specifically about the indifference felt by the speaker, but the speaker acknowledges that his father tended to the son by driving out the cold and polishing the son’s shoes. These actions describe a caring and loving father. In the final two lines of the poem, the speaker acknowledges his ignorance to his father’s love. The speaker has discovered “love’s austere and lonely offices” looking back on those Sunday mornings. The nature of his father’s love has become apparent to him.
It is clear that as a child, the speaker doubted his father’s love. In his youth, he assumed that love was always expresses in certain ways, but once the speaker has grown significantly, he realizes that love can be expressed in many ways. Upon pondering his Sunday morning experiences, the speaker understands that his father expressed his love silently and indirectly through his actions. While the poem is sad and mournful, the speaker seems to resolve his feelings, now that he has realized what he did not before. (595)