A bird broke forth and sang,
And trilled, and quivered, and shook his throat
Till all the churchyard rang;
And then adjusted his little notes,
And bowed and sang again.
Doubtless, he thought it meet of him
To say good-by to men.
F397 (1862) J1761
In this simple poem, Dickinson has a bit of fun at the expense of a bird. She sets the scene simply: a funeral train entered the church cemetery and then the bird sings its little head off.
Village funeral, Frank Holl (1845-1888) |
It's a very droll image, the bird with his notes, bowing and singing. Dickinson ends with the ironic comment that the bird no doubt found it appropriate for him to "say good-by to men." This, in addition to being a lighthearted anthropomorphism, might also be a comment about funerals in general. Are they really the best way to say goodby?
ED the bird, poetry, the song?
ReplyDeleteWhat is the exact meaning of the expression: "..it meet of him"... I read it as "it was expected of him" or "it was appropriate of him"... wonder if my interpretation is in the right direction...
ReplyDeleteYes, you're right. It was appropriate or suitable of him...
DeleteWas it lightheartedly misanthropic ?
ReplyDeleteThanks for this comment that caused me to re-read this little poem. I think you're right! And, clever ED, the poem can be read both ways at the same time. Very droll.
DeleteAs usual, SK calls it like it is in a charming way, not an easy skill. Thanks, you inspire us TPB denizens.
ReplyDeleteAs for your closing question, how else? Silent scatter into the Pacific, my preference? Or, as my lovely bride of 60 years prefers, “I’ll be gone, so do whatever you want.”
Thank you, Larry -- for compliment and for your ongoing research and commentary.
Delete"She sets the scene simply", lovely.
ReplyDelete