Because it flies!
Mortal, my friend must be,
Because it dies!
Barbs has it, like a Bee!
Ah, curious friend!
Thou puzzlest me!
- F 71 (1859) 92
On the face of it the poet is talking to a mysterious animal friend. It flies like a bird, it dies like a mortal being, but it has stinging barbs. But no one believes Dickinson is writing about an odd animal. Consensus has it that she is describing her dear friend and sister-in-law Sue. Sue flies away at the drop of a hat, loving to take vacations and travel. She was known to occasionally lance someone with her tongue, although in Dickinson’s case such ‘Barbs’ might have been rather mild as Dickinson was particularly sensitive to Sue’s words and deeds.
It doesn’t seem like a healthy friendship when one friend is perceived as stinging the other and the stung one then writes immortal poetry about it. Take it as a warning when having a writer as a friend!
Thy rhyme seems a bit lazy: the word ‘friend’ is repeated, and “Bee” is cleverly rhymed with ‘be.” And the idea that the friend is mortal because ‘it’ dies is rather weak as unless the friend is dying, how does the poet know? If the poet assumes the ‘friend’ is mortal, then why point out that it dies? I think the poem was written in order to point out the Barbs.
..and sometimes words have meanings only to those that use them. A personal thought poem for an audience of one. Did ED use her writing of poems to work out her own personal issues, especially with others? Did she ever write in journals?
ReplyDeleteI'd think that daily writing is something like having a journal even if not in a book-like journal. I can't really speak to that more specifically.
DeleteI wonder about they way in which Dickinson wrote privately. Her audience of one (and what an audience) may have demanded she write as if for readers.
It seems likely this poem is about Susan D, in which case the neuter pronoun ‘it’ is a disguise for the feminine ‘she’:
ReplyDeleteMy friend must be a Bird—
Because she flies!
Mortal, my friend must be,
Because she dies!
Barbs has she, like a Bee!
Ah, curious friend!
Thou puzzlest me!
The last line tells us that ED never knows what to expect from Susan. Sometimes she seems emotionally distant, as if she doesn’t love ED, yet, making love, Susan seems a healthy mortal as she dies in Emily’s embrace. What really puzzles ED, however, is how, after intimacy, Susan can hurt her with unexpected stinging words.
my teacher said thats wrong
ReplyDeleteI'd be pleased if you shared your teacher's -- and your -- thoughts on the poems. There are often, especially with Dickinson poems, multiple ways of reading a poem.
Delete