By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain the father's emotional state: love, helplessness, longing
  • 2Analyse the Prodigal Son allusion and its significance
  • 3Interpret the 'seed' and 'land' metaphor
  • 4Discuss the ending — mutual reaching, mutual failure
  • 5Explain why the poem refuses to assign blame
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Why this chapter matters
Universal theme of parent-child estrangement. Prodigal Son allusion frequently tested. 'Seed' and 'land' metaphor. The ending couplet — 'We each put out an empty hand' — one of the most discussed endings in the syllabus. Both characters sympathetic — no villain.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Father to Son — Elizabeth Jennings

"We speak like strangers, there's no sign / Of understanding in the air."

1. About the Poem

'Father to Son' by Elizabeth Jennings (English poet, 1926–2001) is about the PAINFUL DISTANCE between a father and his son. They live in the SAME HOUSE, but the father feels the son is a STRANGER — someone whose 'world' he cannot enter. The father longs to CONNECT, to FORGIVE, to UNDERSTAND. But the son remains unreachable. The poem is about the UNIVERSAL grief of parents and children growing apart.


2. About the Poet

  • Elizabeth Jennings (1926–2001): English poet
  • Part of 'The Movement' — poets who wrote with clarity and emotional restraint
  • Known for poems about personal relationships, mental health, and spiritual longing
  • 'Father to Son' shows her characteristic quiet, honest, emotionally contained style

3. The Poem

I do not understand this child Though we have lived together now In the same house for years. I know Nothing of him, so try to build Up a relationship from how He was when small. Yet have I killed

The seed I spent or sown it where The land is his and none of mine? We speak like strangers, there's no sign Of understanding in the air. This child is built to my design Yet what he loves I cannot share.

Silence surrounds us. I would have Him prodigal, returning to His father's house, the home he knew, Rather than see him make and move His world. I would forgive him too, Shaping from sorrow a new love.

We each put out an empty hand, Longing for something to forgive.


4. Stanza-by-Stanza Breakdown

Stanza 1 — The Distance

  • 'I do not understand this child / Though we have lived together now / In the same house for years.'
  • The father confesses: his son is a STRANGER to him
  • He 'knows nothing of him' — despite LIVING TOGETHER
  • He tries to connect by remembering the son AS A CHILD ('how he was when small')
  • But that child no longer EXISTS
  • 'Yet have I killed / The seed I spent or sown it where / The land is his and none of mine?'
  • The father asks: was I the ONE who destroyed our connection? ('killed the seed')
  • Or did I PLANT it ('sown it') in soil that BELONGS TO THE SON — which I cannot enter?

Stanza 2 — The Pain of Unshared Worlds

  • 'We speak like strangers, there's no sign / Of understanding in the air.'
  • They TALK — but with NO UNDERSTANDING
  • 'This child is built to my design / Yet what he loves I cannot share.'
  • The son is LITERALLY made from the father ('built to my design')
  • But the son's INNER WORLD — his loves, his passions — are INACCESSIBLE to the father
  • The paradox: genetically CONNECTED; emotionally SEPARATED

Stanza 3 — The Father's Wish

  • 'Silence surrounds us.'
  • The silence is the ABSENCE of communication — it's what fills their house
  • 'I would have him prodigal, returning to his father's house, the home he knew'
  • REFERENCE to the Biblical parable of the Prodigal Son: a son who leaves, wastes his inheritance, returns BROKEN — and the father welcomes him with JOY
  • The father WANTS the son to return to him — even if the son has 'failed,' the father will FORGIVE
  • 'Rather than see him make and move his world' — the father resents the son's INDEPENDENCE
  • 'I would forgive him too, shaping from sorrow a new love.'
  • The father's love is CONSTANT. He would TRANSFORM his sorrow into love — if the son would just RETURN.

Stanza 4 — The Tragedy (Final Couplet)

  • 'We each put out an empty hand, / Longing for something to forgive.'
  • BOTH reach out — but the hands are EMPTY (they don't connect)
  • BOTH 'long' for something to forgive — but neither can REACH the other
  • The tragedy: they BOTH want to connect. Neither can.
  • The poem ends NOT with reconciliation but with MUTUAL LONGING

5. Key References

The Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32)

  • A younger son demands his inheritance, leaves home, wastes everything, returns in shame
  • The FATHER runs to embrace him, throws a feast
  • Jennings uses the reference to show: the father in the poem would FORGIVE anything — if only the son would return
  • But THIS son hasn't LEFT physically. He's gone EMOTIONALLY. And that's a harder return.

6. Themes

1. The Generation Gap

Not anger. Not conflict. WORSE: silence. The father and son cannot REACH each other. The gap is not hostile — it's TRAGIC.

2. Parental Love and Helplessness

The father LOVES the son. 'Built to my design.' 'I would forgive him too.' But love alone cannot BRIDGE the distance. The father is HELPLESS.

3. Growing Up as Separation

For the son: becoming himself means SEPARATING from the father. The son needs his OWN world ('the land is his'). This is NATURAL — but PAINFUL for the parent.

4. The Failure of Communication

The poem is ABOUT NOT BEING ABLE TO TALK. The silence 'surrounds' them. The emotional content is what CANNOT be said.


7. Literary Devices

Metaphor

  • 'The seed I spent or sown it where / The land is his' — the son as soil the father cannot farm; the father as sower of seed he cannot harvest
  • 'Empty hand' — the reaching that cannot grasp

Allusion

  • The Prodigal Son — Biblical story of forgiveness and return

Paradox

  • 'Built to my design / Yet what he loves I cannot share' — physically identical, emotionally alien
  • Both reaching out, both failing — the MUTUALITY of the tragedy

Enjambment

  • Lines flow into each other — like the father's thoughts, TUMBLING, UNRESOLVED
  • Only the final couplet stands APART — the tragic summary

Tone

  • Quiet, grieving, LOVING, helpless
  • No anger. No blame. Just SADNESS and LONGING.
  • This is what makes the poem so MOVING — the father is NOT a villain. He's a MAN WHO LOVES and CAN'T REACH.

8. Common Mistakes

  1. The father is a bad, controlling parent — NO. The poem's power is that the father's LOVE is GENUINE. He's not a villain — he's HELPLESS. The tragedy is that LOVE ALONE isn't enough to bridge the gap. The son's need for independence is ALSO legitimate.

  2. The son hates the father — There's NO evidence of this. The son is simply SEPARATE — building his own world. The poem doesn't give the son's voice. We only know that 'we each put out an empty hand' — the son TOO longs for connection.

  3. The poem suggests who is 'right' or 'wrong' — NO. Jennings refuses blame. BOTH are reaching. NEITHER can connect. 'Shaping from sorrow a new love' — the father's love is TRANSFORMATIVE, not accusatory. The poem's wisdom is seeing that parents and children can both WANT connection and FAIL to achieve it.


9. Conclusion

'Father to Son' is a POEM ABOUT THE SILENCE THAT LOVE ALONE CANNOT BREAK:

  • A father and son in the same house — strangers to each other
  • The father longs for the son to RETURN (prodigal) so he can FORGIVE
  • The son needs his OWN world
  • 'We each put out an empty hand' — both reaching, both failing
  • The poem ends in MUTUAL LONGING — not blame, not resolution

The most painful distance is not across miles — but across the silence in the same house. Elizabeth Jennings knew this. Her poem gives that silence a voice.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Poet
Elizabeth Jennings (1926–2001) — English poet, 'The Movement'
Situation
Father and son in SAME HOUSE for years — but STRANGERS. 'I do not understand this child.'
Seed/Land metaphor
Father = sower. Son = soil ('the land is his'). Father planted the seed (son) but cannot harvest (connect).
Prodigal Son
Biblical story (Luke 15). Father wants son to RETURN so he can FORGIVE. 'Shaping from sorrow a new love.'
Ending couplet
'We each put out an empty hand, / Longing for something to forgive.' Both reach. Neither connects.
Mutual tragedy
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
The father is a controlling, bad parent
The poem REFUSES this reading. The father's LOVE is genuine. He wants to forgive, not control. The tragedy is that LOVE ALONE cannot bridge the gap. The son's need for independence is ALSO valid. No one is 'right' or 'wrong.'
WATCH OUT
The son hates his father / is rebellious
No evidence. The son is simply SEPARATE — building his own world. The final line says 'WE EACH put out an empty hand' — the son ALSO longs. The tragedy is MUTUAL, not one-sided.
WATCH OUT
The Prodigal Son reference = the son wasted his life and needs to come home
The son hasn't 'wasted' anything. The father WANTS the prodigal scenario because it would allow FORGIVENESS and RECONNECTION. The reference shows the father's LONGING, not the son's actions.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1MEDIUM
Explain the seed and land metaphor in 'Father to Son.' What does each element of the metaphor represent?
Q2MEDIUM
How does the allusion to the Prodigal Son illuminate the father's state of mind? What does the father WANT from this allusion?
Q3MEDIUM
'There is no villain in the poem — both father and son are victims of the same silence.' Discuss, with close reference to 'Father to Son.'

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Situation: father and son = strangers sharing a house. Father 'knows nothing of him.'
  • Seed metaphor: father planted the 'seed' — son is the 'land.' The land belongs to the SON, not the father.
  • 'Built to my design / yet what he loves I cannot share' — paradox of genetic connection + emotional separation.
  • Prodigal Son: father would forgive ANYTHING if son would return. Wants reconciliation, not control.
  • 'Silence surrounds us' — the absence of communication defines their relationship.
  • Ending: 'We each put out an empty hand' — MUTUAL longing, MUTUAL failure. Both want connection. Neither can reach.
  • No villain. No blame. The poem's power is its REFUSAL to simplify. Themes: generation gap, helpless love, silence.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 3-4 marks · CBSE Class 11 English (Poetry section)

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / VSA (1 mark)11Poet's name, identify the seed/land metaphor, Prodigal Son reference
Short Answer (2 marks)21Explain seed/land metaphor, Prodigal Son allusion, or the ending couplet
Long Answer (3-4 marks)31No villain analysis, mutual tragedy, generation gap, father's state of mind
Prep strategy
  • The ending couplet — 'We each put out an empty hand, / Longing for something to forgive' — is the most-tested part. Know its TWO elements: (1) mutual reaching (both father and son), (2) mutual failure to connect. The word 'each' is the key — both are equal in longing.
  • For Prodigal Son: know the Bible story briefly (son squanders, returns, father forgives joyfully). Then explain what the poem's father WANTS from this scenario — forgiveness as a PATH to reconnection. The father would forgive anything for a reason to embrace the son.
  • For seed/land metaphor: father = sower, son = land. The land belongs to the SON — not the farmer. This is why the father cannot 'harvest' connection: the son's inner world is his own territory.
  • Never say the father is controlling or the son is rebellious — both interpretations are explicitly refused by the poem. The tragedy is that love alone cannot bridge the gap.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Family therapy: estrangement and the difficulty of re-entry

Immigration and cultural estrangement: when generations become strangers

Child development: individuation as separation

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. The ending couplet gets asked most frequently: 'We each put out an empty hand, / Longing for something to forgive.' Analyse it in FOUR layers: (1) both characters reach out (mutual), (2) both fail to connect (empty), (3) both want forgiveness as a path to reconnection, (4) the symmetry of 'we each' refuses to blame either. Four layers = full marks for any question about the ending.
  2. For 'no villain' analysis: build the argument for BOTH characters separately, then draw the synthesis. The father is not controlling (he wants to forgive, not punish). The son is not rebellious (he also reaches out with an empty hand). Neither chose the silence — it grew from the necessary process of growing up.
  3. Seed/land metaphor: always connect BOTH parts of the metaphor to their meaning. 'Father sowed' = he is the creator. 'The land is his (the son's)' = the son's inner world belongs to himself. Then explain the tragedy: the farmer has no right to the crop when the land belongs to another.
  4. For 'Prodigal Son' extract or question: know the original story briefly, then explain what the poem's father WANTS from it — forgiveness as a mechanism for reconnection. A good answer shows you know the allusion AND understand its function in this specific poem.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Compare 'Father to Son' with Kahlil Gibran's 'On Children' from 'The Prophet': 'Your children are not your children. They are the sons and daughters of Life's longing for itself.' Gibran's philosophy — that children belong to the future and the parent's role is to bend toward them — is the POSITIVE framing of the same reality the poem describes. The poem's father has not understood what Gibran articulates: that the land belongs to itself. Does Gibran's philosophy offer a resolution to the poem's tragedy, or does it merely reframe what is still a loss?
  • Investigate attachment theory (John Bowlby) and the concept of 'secure base.' Bowlby argued that the goal of attachment is not CLOSENESS but the child's CAPACITY TO EXPLORE from a secure base. A securely attached child SHOULD individuate and become a stranger in the poem's sense. If the father in the poem has been a 'good enough' parent (Winnicott's phrase), then the son's separateness is evidence of SUCCESSFUL attachment, not its failure. Does the poem allow this reading? Is the father's grief the price of successful parenting?
  • Research the psychological concept of 'AMBIGUOUS LOSS' (Pauline Boss) — a loss without clarity, without a definitive ending, where the person is physically present but psychologically absent (or vice versa). The father experiences this: the son is THERE (in the same house) but also GONE (emotionally unreachable). Boss's work (originally on families of missing soldiers, now applied to dementia, estrangement, and emigration) shows that ambiguous loss is often HARDER to grieve than death because there is no clear moment of loss, no ritual, no ending. Does 'Father to Son' describe ambiguous loss?
  • Read Philip Larkin's 'This Be the Verse' — 'They fuck you up, your mum and dad.' Larkin argues that parents (despite themselves) transmit their flaws to their children, who transmit them further. Compare with 'Father to Son': Jennings' father is bewildered, loving, and self-aware. Larkin's parents are unwittingly destructive. Both poems are about parent-child damage — but from opposite perspectives (parent's bewilderment vs child's critique). What does the difference in perspective reveal about who bears the responsibility for generational harm?

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

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Last reviewed on 26 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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