Analysis of The Child as Son Becoming Father of the Man



          PRELUDE: THE EARTHLY
           DOMAIN OF MAN

From the Lake District poet Wordsworth’s “Father of the Man,”
to the universal Father of all Mankind.
There is a legacy and a promise of divine parenthood.

As it is above in the heavenly realm,
so it is desired below in the earthly domain:
The son reflecting holiness of the Heavenly Father.

In ‘olam ha-zeh,’ the earthly realm,
mankind is by many things made restless.
With children seeking comfort from that one thing which matters most.

An earthly child seeks comfort from an adult parent’s love;
which is his  inherited legacy of the world.
The adult mirroring the child’s mirroring the adult’s cares and worries.

The adult seeing in his own child’s face,
his childhood’s  face reflected.
The man as adult recapturing in the infant his own childhood memories.

And by reflecting on himself as once a child,
the adult finds in this reflected image,
an eternal state of awe and wonderment.

Compelling him with lucid observation,
that he is more than what’s portrayed before him.
That in this child he reflects the past, the present; and the future.

We are indeed much more than flesh and blood.
We are beings capable of reflection.
And this reflection connects us with all things; old and new.

Let this truth sink and dwell in us.
Let it be eternally resident within us.
Let us meditate on it day and night.

“Each of us is  a mirror of someone else’s mirror; reflected back to us.
We are present images reflecting ancient ones;
renewed once more again in future images.”

Shaped and nourished by parental roots,
we’re always in a state of great becoming.
Linking the present with the past and future.

That is the offering of a human seed that’s sowed.
Nourished; in our time to bear future fruit.
Fruit as genesis destined to become fruit for our revelation.

When fruitfully fulfilled at last,
the seed as child, by nature’s own urging,
becomes much more than simply being.

The act of  becoming is indeed much more than that of being.
That is what impels us to our individuation:
To become whole; to repair our brokenness.

Conclusion: “The Child is Father of the Man.”

POSTLUDE: THE HEAVENLY
      REALM OF THE ALMIGHTY

We see this legacy and promise foreshadowed eloquently.
Our barrenness healed; our brokenness made whole.
In the image and likeness of a special heavenly child.

In ‘olam haba,’ the heavenly realm,
comfort is gained from harmony.
The child sustained by blessed assurances.

A child reflecting all that his father is.
In harmony with the Holy Spirit:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit as One.

This child of heavenly realm as Son of Man.
An Advent Man of Sorrows bringing Peace, Hope, Joy and Love.
Salvation’s joy for humankind.

We can meditate on this in the Gospel of John Sixteen.
In verse twenty one this Man of Sorrows informs us,
concerning how all joy can vanquish sorrows:

“A woman…as soon as she is delivered of the child,
she remembereth no more the anguish,
for joy that a man is born into the world.”

So came one to deliver us.
To offer comfort; freedom from adversity.
A Man of Sorrows offering Joy.

Born to humanity as a lowly child,
to become a risen man,
this child is indeed the Father of Mankind.

And in this risen form of his,
he offers us all redemption.
A joy beyond all human comprehension.

This divine redemptive joy he offers is one of piety.
It binds us to be the keepers of each other.
Ourselves reflected in him and in one another.

Let those then that have eyes now see.
Let those with ears to hear now hear.
Reflect on this, and wisdom will not depart from you.

For this, one came to counsel us.
To be obedient, as he was to his own father.
The child becoming Father of all Mankind.

This is the pious will of the divine realm:
The Son of Man is destined to bear wholesome Fruit of the Spirit.
This special child becoming Father of all Mankind.

As it is above in the heavenly realm,
so it is desired below in the earthly domain:
the son reflecting holiness of the Heavenly Father.

Conclusion: “The Father is the Son of Man.”


Scheme ab bcx DEF dgx hij xkj lxx mxf kmn ggx gxx xof xxm xoo obg b aa axl dap pqm bhc xgx lxi gax lbc pmm aff axn gfc dqc DEF b
Poetic Form
Metre 1010 0111 1011010110101 10010101111 110100001010110 11101001001 11101001001001 010101001010010 01110101 1111101110 110101011111101 11011101101101 1110100100101 001100011000011010 0011001111 111010 0110101000010111100 010101011101 00110101010 10101110100 0101110010 11111001011 1011101010100010 1101111101 11101001010 01010011111101 11110101 1110100100011 111011101 1111010111010010111 1110100010101 011101010100 101010101 0100111010 10010101010 1101001010111 10010111101 11100101011110010 110111 0111110110 011111010 0110101011111110 111111101 1011101101 01001110101 10100 110010 1111000100101000 101110111 001001010101001 01101001 10111100 0101110100 01010111101 0100101010 1010101011 11110011111 1111101011101 11110 11101100101101 0110111110011 01011111010 01011111010101 1111010 11101110101 11110101 110101010100 011101001 11010010101 1010101 11101010111 00110111 11011010 0101110010 1010101110111100 111110101110 00101001001010 11111111 11111111 0111010110111 11111101 11010011111110 01010101111 11010110011 0111110111011010 1101010101111 11101001001 11101001001001 010101001010010 01001010111
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 4,116
Words 834
Sentences 61
Stanzas 32
Stanza Lengths 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 1, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 1
Lines Amount 90
Letters per line (avg) 35
Words per line (avg) 8
Letters per stanza (avg) 98
Words per stanza (avg) 22

About this poem

So eloquently did William Wordsworth express himself in his 1802 poem, “My Heart Leaps Up,” with the enduring proverbial phrase, “The Child is Father of the Man,” meaning that the qualities and personality traits acquired as a child, are genetically nurtured and elevated during the years of adulthood. We see ourselves reflected in our children, even as they see themselves reflected in us. These same or similar sentiments are expressed scripturally in Proverbs 22:6, which reads as follows: “Train up a child in the way that he should go; when he is old he will not depart from it. ” Likewise are the sentiments of this poem, “The Child as Son Becoming Father of the Man,” written proverbially to emphasize the umbilically intertwining connection between parent and offspring, between and among fellow humankind; and particularly so as a divine commandment between humanity and God, the Father, God, the Son, and God, the Holy Spirit. 

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Written on July 30, 1979

Submitted by karlcfolkes on June 24, 2022

Modified by karlcfolkes on December 13, 2023

4:10 min read
1,164

Karl Constantine FOLKES

Retired educator of Jamaican ancestry with a lifelong interest in composing poetry dealing particularly with the metaphysics of self-reflection; completed a dissertation in Children’s Literature in 1991 at New York University entitled: An Analysis of Wilhelm Grimm’s ‘Liebe Mili’ (translated into English as “Dear Mili”), Employing Von Franzian Methodological Processes of Analytical Psychology. The subject of the dissertation concerned the process of Individuation. more…

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