Tsotha
donnyQ
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2013
- Posts
- 1,462
As reader wouldn't you be curious why she is so sad over a broken vessel, why she is worthy of remembrance in form of statue and also poetry?
The first four lines do nothing but set the scene of a sad milkmaid crying over her broken urn:
One day a girl with an urn
Let it drop on the boulder beneath her.
Sadly she sits and alone,
Uselessly holding the pieces.
The next four lines are a play on the fact that we're actually talking about a statue, so "she" isn't really crying, and the liquid isn't really flowing:
But see! What marvel is this?
For the water pours yet from her vessel.
There she continues today,
Her gaze on this endless spring.
I'd say it is obvious why she is sad, since the poem doesn't commit enough words toward asking me to consider it further. As it is, the milkmaid isn't a "symbol" (for me) — it's a reference, something that I need to go look up.
The title is the only thing in the poem that points toward meaning. So now I have to go on a treasure hunt to find out what statue the poem is talking about, what milkmaid it represents, what the fable is about, and where in the world the statue stands. Thank "god" for the world wide web and search engines. This finally allows me to consider whether the statue of a humble milkmaid crying over spilt milk is:
- a general comment on pride, borrowing directly from La Fontaine's fable — not very smart or interesting.
- a comment on depression, considering line 6: "the water pours yet from her vessel", but she is sad nonetheless, she can't stop being sad even though things are actually fine (the water is still flowing).
- a clever piece of social criticism standing right under the emperor's nose.
And now it's a symbol, reaching beyond the literal.
There isn't enough in the poem itself that makes it a symbol for me. It isn't self-contained, it doesn't expand on the elements it presents, it just throws a reference in there and relies on me having the background it needs. Not that it matters. The success of the poem isn't measured by whether *I* found it meaningful, but by whether the poet's intended audience did.
It's not limited work if a metaphor refers to popular information. I can write a limited poem that refers to regional NY Catskill icons: John Burroughs, Slide Mtn, Washington Irving's History of New York characters, Shon-gum prisoners etc. and have it only appeal to people with a peculiar poetic interest in the history and literature of the region. As in, like a dozen people.
If you are writing about the Catskill icons, then there is nothing that can be done about it. The poem's subject is something that is in itself of interest to a specific group of people.
If, however, you're writing about something that is relevant to all human beings (love, hate fame, pride, whatever) and you're using the Catskill icons as a metaphor for the general idea that you're trying to develop, then you're choosing to limit the poem to a specific group of people.
And I meant "limited" in the sense that you've restricted your audience, not that it is a "bad" poem. I suppose it could be argued that, by limiting the audience, you can use symbols that are more meaningful, that resonate more with your readers, resulting in a "better" poem (for that specific audience) than you'd get without relying on references.
EDIT: There is a poem by greenmountaineer called "Starving Artist". It's a poem about (drum roll) starving artists. However, it refers to a real world starving artist. Is it a better poem by having the reference, or could/should it have been avoided? Is the reference just a placeholder for something that could have been expanded in the poem itself, or is it truly a symbol, something that holds so much meaning that it couldn't be written otherwise? Just another thing to consider...
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