VintageBetter
Senior Member
Making something? Going somewhere? Helping someone or some cause? Telling someone(s) how they are wrong and where they can stick that thought?
No rageMaking something? Going somewhere?
Me too, oldaunt. I am quite reconciled to my eventual demise. I intend to go peacefully into the darkness if at all possible. Until that day comes I hope to continue to be useful in any way that I can.I will stick with peaceful acceptance, since you can't stop it anyway.
Ditto. Walk through the rage with acceptanceI will stick with peaceful acceptance, since you can't stop it anyway.
Yeah, but yesterday, the taste of life was sweet, like rain upon my tongue.Dylan Thomas... very meaningful and one of his best.
My answer? No idea, but the song "Yesterday When I Was Young" is going through my mind now...
Best lines from it:
"I ran so fast that time and youth at last ran out
And I never stopped to think what life was all about"
So I guess my answer would be that I'm trying to stop and think what life is all about.
'Twas indeed. Perhaps the time has come for me to pay for yesterday... when I was young. Sheesh, I need to go look for a cheerful thread... I won't even be 70 for years yet and right now I'm feeling as if I'm one step over. Start a thread with something happy and positive, Frank!Yeah, but yesterday, the taste of life was sweet, like rain upon my tongue.
Ok, lemme think....for a few days or so, really hard.Start a thread with something happy and positive, Frank!
"Wise men at their end know dark is right."I have always understood to "rage against the dying of the light" refers to the will not to give up as death draws closer. In that context, I see "rage" as the determination to be who you are and have always been despite the advancing years.![]()
I always took "know it's right" to mean that it can't be avoided... but then right away he says to fight it... like all the stanzas do."Wise men at their end know dark is right."
Then it goes on to say they; the wise, I assume; do not go gentle into that good night, but that never made sense to me. If they know the dark is right, why wouldn't they go gentle-like?
We studied this at college and I may be completely wrong but, I always thought that the reference about their words having forked no lightning, means that they still fight the unavoidable, (even though they are wise enough to know death is inevitable), because they know their lives had no impact on the world."Wise men at their end know dark is right."
Then it goes on to say they; the wise, I assume; do not go gentle into that good night, but that never made sense to me. If they know the dark is right, why wouldn't they go gentle-like?
@CallMeKate's post is a better explanation than mineI always took "know it's right" to mean that it can't be avoided... but then right away he says to fight it... like all the stanzas do.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.