Two-Headed Calf

What is the narrator point of view in the poem, Two-Headed Calf?

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Last updated by Jill W
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The poem is told through an omniscient speaker who does not appear directly as a presence in the poem. This lack of presence keeps the focus directly on the two-headed calf, providing impartial and all-knowing perspectives on the calf’s life. For example, the speaker shares that the calf will die and be put on display at a museum “tomorrow,” “but tonight he is alive and in the north / field” (1 and 4-5). This ability to span time and space to provide information likens the speaker to a god, or to fate itself speaking.

Source(s)

Two-Headed Calf, BookRags