Hello Friends,
It's a nearly universal experience to read or hear the same words over again, and have them mean something different to us, isn't it? How human of us!
Something we didn't touch directly on with
yesterday's "Vocabulary" poem is how the meaning of even a single word changes over time and in different contexts — context in sentence, in a room, in the mouth of a particular speaker, in the walls of the brain it reverberates in. You could make an argument that a word signifies something slightly different every single time it's used — as Humpty Dumpty* argues in Lewis Carroll's
Through the Looking Glass when he says (in a rather scornful tone),
"When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less."
Today's poem, from the Palestinian-American poet Naomi Shihab Nye in her 1995 collection
Words Under the Words: Selected Poems, is in part about how much of a poem's, a word's, a sound's, a train's meaning — at the very least
half — belongs to the listener, the reader, the audience.
You know that saying about the tree falling in the woods, whether it makes a sound or not if nobody hears it? Is it any less mysterious when the tree falls and people
do hear the sound — how much the tree determines what the sound it makes sounds like, and how much the people listening determine that sound? And how much something so much bigger.
You think about that tree, or the train whistle, and don't ever let anyone tell you that you got the meaning of a poem "wrong," ok? It's entirely possible for a poem to mean something to you that the poet never intended — you could argue it's not only possible, but inevitable. But that doesn't make the meaning you read
wrong; it just makes it
yours.
For what Edna St. Vincent Millay hears in the train whistle, see
"Traveling." And for another take on what doesn't change when stars explode, see
Elizabeth Bishop's "The Shampoo."
April is National Poetry Month, and I am celebrating with my own eclectic selection of 30 poems by 30 poets, and some of what they mean to me. Thank you again for letting me share this month with you.
— Ellen