Even when you’re as tough as the guys in "The Cremation of Sam McGee" seem to be, it’s a pretty rough life up in the Yukon. Just getting around is a chore, and it seems like you hurt pretty much all the time. We get a lot of different descriptions of suffering in this poem, most of them having to do with how bloody cold it is. We hear about the pain of dying in the cold, the pain of travelling in the cold, etc. Fun to read about, not a lot of fun to do.
Questions About Suffering
- Does this poem make suffering seem like a good thing? Does it seem cool or impressive, or just miserable?
- What's the worst suffering in this poem? When do you feel worst for the characters?
- Do you have a guess about why Service talks about pain so much in this poem? What does it add to the overall effect?
- Is there some kind of payoff for all the hard times these guys go through? Would you say this story has a happy ending?
Chew on This
This poem’s focus on suffering gives us a strong sense of a particular place and time, and makes the whole work much more moving.
At the last moment, the poem turns a moment of real suffering into a silly joke, which rewards the characters and the readers for the pain they have been through.