tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post4304427191610204909..comments2024-03-28T11:04:36.401-07:00Comments on the prowling Bee: When Diamonds are a LegendSusan Kornfeldhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05384011972647144453noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-63558240365729042052023-11-28T14:57:06.391-08:002023-11-28T14:57:06.391-08:00The rudiments of queen honey bee mating behavior (...The rudiments of queen honey bee mating behavior (promiscuous beyond belief) have been known to beekeepers for centuries. Homestead probably produced its own honey, and ED may have watched the spectacular mating behavior of a queen honey bee:<br /><br />“[A] virgin queen [bee] will fly out on a sunny, warm day to a drone [male] congregation area where she will mate with 12–15 drones. If the weather holds, she may return to the drone congregation area for several days until she is fully mated. Mating occurs in flight. The young queen stores up to 6 million sperm from multiple drones in her spermatheca. She will selectively release [those] sperm for the remaining 2–7 years of her life.”<br /><br />https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_bee <br /><br />In her poems, ED uses the words “butterfly” (33) and “butterflies” (17) a total of 50 times, beginning with ‘One sister have I in our House’ (F5, 1858) and perhaps most famously in her irreverent riff on the Christian Trinity Formula:<br /><br />“In the name of the Bee –<br />And of the Butterfly –<br />And of the Breeze – Amen!”<br /><br />(F23, 1858)<br />Larry Bhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02810899482852120751noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-37724521786160711932018-07-27T13:46:37.200-07:002018-07-27T13:46:37.200-07:00Yes -- that makes perfect and beautiful sense. Tha...Yes -- that makes perfect and beautiful sense. Thank you!Susan Kornfeldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05384011972647144453noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-13651382092973841082018-07-27T12:53:13.961-07:002018-07-27T12:53:13.961-07:00She wrote to T W Higginson in a letter (L767), ‘I...She wrote to T W Higginson in a letter (L767), ‘I never wear Jewels.’ She was very passionate about flowers and her garden. I read the brooches and jewels as metaphors for flowers. The Queen was a person honored to receive one from her, the butterfly the other beneficiary. Horticulture is her Art a Summer Day!Greg Mattinglyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05992933717468579465noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-28578511861676460322015-05-28T05:44:30.479-07:002015-05-28T05:44:30.479-07:00This is such a lovely "Once upon a time poem&...This is such a lovely "Once upon a time poem" completely taking place inside the poet's imagination. What a confident vision filled the lilt and light and playfulness and riches and royalty.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-24048673184508054612014-10-23T16:05:48.117-07:002014-10-23T16:05:48.117-07:00Maybe, or maybe a play on the term. She might have...Maybe, or maybe a play on the term. She might have meant grandiose and lovely Sue who in fact was an audience for Dickinson. Such a figure might well double as a queen bee.Susan Kornfeldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05384011972647144453noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-58977922789447978082014-10-23T12:55:49.631-07:002014-10-23T12:55:49.631-07:00I read "Queen" to mean "bee".I read "Queen" to mean "bee".Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-2060705338060011892014-08-29T22:35:27.700-07:002014-08-29T22:35:27.700-07:00Allowing for Dickinson's looseness with gramma...Allowing for Dickinson's looseness with grammar, I think the best approach to Dickinson's poetry is to look for the simplest reading that fits with the entire poem. In this case, even though the "it" is singular and "Patrons" is plural, I believe that "it was a Queen" and "[it was] a Butterfly" tie back to the "Patrons". There's a good reason for having a singular "it" and the plural antecedent "Patrons": both Queen and Butterfly were separate singular experiences. <br /><br />As to the verbs in the first stanza, I think Dickinson has simply put the verbs "Do sow, and Raise" after their objects: "Brooch and Earrings". We would more commonly write, "I do sow and raise for sale Brooch and Earrings all by myself." She doesn't have to depend on long-gone diamonds and diadems. <br /><br />Now that you mention it, I do think there is a nice irony in opening the poem with diamonds and closing it with a butterfly.Susan Kornfeldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05384011972647144453noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-72180610968782135342014-08-15T19:10:49.669-07:002014-08-15T19:10:49.669-07:00I apologize for the mistakes in grammar in my earl...I apologize for the mistakes in grammar in my earlier comment. Zefirinohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05826052577521342639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4029797379711350813.post-90709330123648848592014-08-15T19:06:56.729-07:002014-08-15T19:06:56.729-07:00I read it differently: in her art she was once que...I read it differently: in her art she was once queen--majestic over captive audience or possibly queen of nature. After life, she is a butterfly, reincarnated through interpretation. To address a human patron, a queen even more so, with the pronoun "it" is more than a bit condescending; though I suppose that suggests that she is upset about being "scarcely accounted." Using the pronoun "it" for "art" may work in a different fashion. I think it can be interpreted both ways: dashes make the line of thinking nebulous. <br /><br />In the second stanza, she writes, (1) she is hardly accounted for; (2) her art is much like a summer's day; (3) although she is hardly accounted, she did have patrons (given apropos in the heat and lethargy of a summer's day), (4) and although her art in this poem is slightly mellow, restful, and lethargic, she once reigned supreme in some earlier deliberate, commanding, authoritative poems, (5) at once she will live anew reincarnated much like the butterfly. <br /><br />This interpretation is further supported when accounting for the contrast between the diamond and the butterfly. Diamonds are supposedly forever, while a butterflies life is brief as can be. She starts off thinking about the diamond, and finishes with the butterfly. Also, she raises these diamonds and diadem for sale (presumably for her art as a symbol). Using brooch and earrings as verbs is pretty interesting. Brooch and broach are pretty similar. I'm inclined to think she's almost considering the worth (broaching) of such fanciful jewels for her symbols (earrings or adornments for her poetry). Alas, in the second stanza, we learn that the sale wasn't enough.Zefirinohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05826052577521342639noreply@blogger.com