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Overview

The speaker of the poem may be thinking back to his childhood and how he used to view climbing his grandfather as climbing a mountain. Another interpretation could be that as an adult, climbing a mountain now reminds the speaker of his grandfather. Either way, Waterhouse presents the reader with an , which compares a kindly old man and a craggy mountain.

There is a sense that the speaker enjoys free-climbing and mountaineering as an adult. Through imagining climbing his grandfather as a mountain, the speaker is able to recall clear details from his childhood of scaling a great man. Although he may have lost his grandfather, these memories help the speaker to feel closer to the man he knew.

Compare 鈥楥limbing my Grandfather鈥 and 鈥榃alking Away鈥 in this podcast

In this episode, Testament and Caroline Bird discuss the poems 鈥楥limbing my Grandfather鈥 by Andrew Waterhouse and 鈥榃alking Away鈥 by Cecil Day-Lewis.