He has permission to leave the grounds during the day,
and (unrealistically) to visit his childhood home that is now occupied
by another family.
Yes, the idea that someone confined to a mental hospital would be given
a day pass to go off on a road trip by himself is very "unrealistic" and (while I liked it being as possibility) it's not a very logical
possibility. I believe you went for it because you wanted to and went on
to claim that Bob broke into the house, and you had to get rid of the
idea that he had permission to be there.
"Grownup George" ends the poem by expressing his
wish that he would like to burn his father's house to the ground.
So Bob does. It's a very dramatic ending, which could make a reader
think that he was a psycho -- iff the reader had already decided he was
a psycho. Which is why I had Bob daydream about being able to buy the
house and burn it, rather than simply start looking for matches and
gasoline. As I said, I wanted to balance things and let the reader draw
her own conclusions.
The framing story, is obviously fictional insofar as real life George
Dance is not living in a mental institution, and is not (to the best of
my knowledge) undergoing psychiatric care.
As I say, it's impossible to separate the two. The Bob who's walking
through the house, and looking out the window, is the same Bob who's remembering these things; and the fact that Bob's having those memories,
is the same fact as that he's remembering them. If you decided, from s1,
that he's escaped from a mental institution (which is what you meant by claiming it's "unrealistic" for him to have got permission to visit the house), then you'd go on to look for confirming evidence in s2-s8, which
is what it sounds like you did.
It is, however, reasonable
to conclude that the author thinks of his childhood home as *his
father's house*
Yes, of course it was *his father's house*, just as the home I grew up
in was my own father's house. He built it with his own hands; but even
if he'd just bought it or even rented it, it would still be his, the
place he provided for his family to live. I'd consider a child's refusal
to acknowledge that fact to be a sign of rivalry and resentment, a
refusal to give one's father due credit.
and that he still harbors some anger toward his father
(even though his father is presumed to be deceased).
Bob certainly has unresolved issues with his father, but "anger" (much
less the desire for revenge "De." NastyGoon attributed to him) is a
matter of interpretation. OTOH, whether Bob's father is dead or not is
not a matter of interpretation; it's clearly stated in the poem.
In short, the bulk of the narrative is based on real life memories from
its author's childhood.
All my poetry is "based" on my memories, but (as I've told you) my
memories include much more than direct experience). In this case, I
mainly used my own memories of my childhood because they worked. I
certainly had issues with my father as a teenager when I lived there,
and for a small time after I ceased to do so, and I wanted to make Bob's issues no different from mine.
Why then all the fuss about my having called it "autobiographical"?
Because you not only repeatedly insist that it's "autobiographical" when you've been told it wasn't, you try to draw conclusions about me from
it. (One particularly funny example of that, which I have to mention, is
a claim you made that I call you and "Dr." NastyGoon malicious trolls,
not because I perceive the two of you as malicious trolls, but because I perceive you as "parent figures" and I'm calling you both trolls just to somehow get revenge on my real parents. "Psychobabble", as I've said.)
It's a typical Straw Man argument intended to divert the discussion from
examining the psychological aspects of the narrative, and to falsely
represent an attempt to provide an in-depth analysis of the poem as a
personal attack upon himself.
Not at all. Seeing the poem as "autobiographical" allows you to present
your so-called analysis of Bob as an analysis of me, and try to justify
your own "attacks" on me. As you often do, want to label the poem "autobiographical" (just as you want to call Bob "George") as if, a la Orwell, the words you use somehow prove your arguments.
Good old paranoid, perpetually persecuted George.
And, since that last line of yours was what your "analysis" was meant to establish, and your only reason for your undertaking it in the first
place, it's a good place to conclude this post.
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