Figurative Language
An overview
Metaphors and Similes
Metaphors and similes involve comparisons between two unlike things
Literal comparison– His car is as fast as Tom’s car– The Exorcist is scarier than The Blair Witch
Project Figurative comparison
– His car is as fast as lighting (simile)– My love life is a soap opera (metaphor)
Simile asserts a resemblance
“bent double like old beggars under sacks”
“coughing like hags” “obscene as cancer” “roots ripe as old bait” “bulky as a sleeping cat” “cinders that covered the ground like
snow”
Metaphor asserts an identity
“the mountain of beans in my lap” [hailstones are] “little white planets” “It was festival, carnival” “the wolf whine of the siren” “Old age is a flight of small cheeping
birds.”
A poem using metaphors
On the next slide I provide the text of Sylvia Plath’s poem “Metaphors.”
It consists of a series of metaphors for the same thing.
Can you figure out what all the metaphors refer to?
Metaphors
I’m a riddle in nine syllables,
An elephant, a ponderous house,
A melon strolling on two tendrils.
Oh red fruit, ivory, fine timbers!
This loaf’s big with its yeasty rising.
Money’s new minted in this fat purse.
I’m a means, a stage, a cow in calf.
I’ve eaten a bag of green apples,
Boarded the train there’s no getting off.
Answer
The metaphors describe a pregnant woman. For example—”Eaten a bag of green apples” can refer to both morning sickness and the baby bump. “A melon strolling on two tendrils” describes the look of the pregnant woman’s body—huge stomach on two thin legs. A pregnancy is “a riddle in nine syllables” because it lasts nine months and at the time this was written the sex of the child would be a mystery.
Parts of a comparison
Tenor: real object
Pregnant woman experience of becoming
pregnant and feeling your body swell and change as the birth comes closer 0r going into labor
Vehicle: What it’s compared to
elephant “boarded the train
there’s no getting off”
Extended metaphor
In “Metaphors” several different metaphors were provided for one thing. In some poems a single metaphor is elaborated on for several lines, supported by various related comparisons. Let’s look at Langston Hughes’s “Mother to Son.” What metaphor for life is used in this poem?
Extended metaphor
An extended metaphor is continued over at least several lines of the poem. When the whole poem involves an extended metaphor we can also call that the controlling metaphor of the poem. In “Mother to Son” the controlling metaphor is that the journey through life is like climbing a staircase, but everyone does not have the same sort of staircase to climb. The next page breaks down some of the smaller comparisons that are part of this controlling metaphor.
“MARKS”
Linda Pastan’s “Marks” is another good example of a poem with a controlling metaphor. The speaker is a woman who compares herself to a student ready to drop out of school as she explains that she is tried of feeling criticized or unappreciated by her family.
“Marks”
Vehicle– Student– Teachers– Courses or
assignments– Grades– Dropping out of
school
Tenor– Wife and mother– Husband, kids– Sex, cooking,
ironing, childrearing– Comments or
criticisms– Getting divorced or
not playing trad. role anymore
Personification
Attributing human qualities to non-human things (a kind of metaphor)– “Fearing the chronic angers of that house”– “even the dirt kept breathing a small breath”– A poem that uses extensive personification is
“Schizophrenia”. In an extended metaphor the house is personified as someone being torn apart of even driven mad by the fighting among the family members inhabiting it.
Puns = play on words
A pun involves playful use of words that have more than one meaning or sound very similar to other words.
“Carnal Knowledge” is a pun meaning knowing about meat and having sex.
“Marks” means grades, and the wounds caused by getting these grades
“The neighbors said it was a madhouse”– Can be a metaphor for a house with crazy people in it
(insane asylum) or the house itself has been driven mad.
Metonymy Substitution: cause for effect, container for
contained, something closely associated with something else with thing itself– The king could be referred to as “the crown” – “Doublet and hose should show itself courageous to the
petticoat” = men should act courageously in front of women
– “The pen is mightier than the sword”= it is easier to persuade through writing than through force
– “Detroit opposed the new emission standards” Detroit = the city where most American car manufacturers have their headquarters so here it stands for the auto industry
Alternate definition: “to convey the intangible in terms of the tangible by substitution” – “the heart” for love, “tears” for sorrow
Synecdoche
Part is used to signify the whole: – Child is “another mouth to feed” – Ten workers are “ten hands “ – “He belongs behind bars.”
Whole for a part – “Germany invaded Poland.”
By some definitions, synecdoche is viewed as a special case of metonymy. They can be hard to tell apart.
Synecdoche/metonymy
“Her heart was learning to lie down forever” (heart=dog; “lie down forever” stands for dying.)
“All pajamas and running noses” (both stand for children)
“We longed for burnt wood” (stands for fire) “. . . Rage. . . Walked in the ironlike black coat
before him” (coat for father) (and father is the personification of rage)—This line is from “Barn Burning.”
Hyperbole = exaggeration
“The whiskey on your breath could make a small boy dizzy”
“Men marched asleep” “A mountain of beans”
Understatement=saying less than you mean “No one ever thanked him”
– When the poet says no one ever thanked the father for warming the house, it seems to mean that no one appreciated anything he did.
“Life for me ain’t been no crystal stair”– The implication is that it’s been the
extreme opposite
Oxymoron and paradox
Paradox is a self-contradictory statement that is nevertheless true– “It was the house that suffered most”
An oxymoron is the combination of contradictory words– Sweet sorrow– Jumbo shrimp– Deceitful candor