Metaphors Poem Metaphor

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In the first sentence of the poem “Metaphors”, it says nine syllables and there are only nine lines in the poem. The nine syllables can also be referring to the nine long months of pregnancy. The poet uses “I’m” in the beginning, implying that the poet is speaking about a person and a pregnant person at that. In the next few lines the speaker begins to describe how she feels about being pregnant. In the second line of the poem, the words elephant and ponderous house is portraying herself as enormous, lifeless, and bulky being pregnant. Moving on to the third line she talks about a melon being on tendrils. The melon also known for being a big round piece of fruit indicating her stomach is gigantic. As for the tendrils, those would be her legs The speaker is letting you know that an abortion will be tough to dismiss from her mind, something one cannot forget. She begins to speak about the unborn child she was pregnant with but did not get to have either. In lines three through six, she begins to fantasize of what her children would have looked like. The damp small pulps are hinting to a baby’s head because pulp is the soft, juicy part of fruit just like the soft spot on the top of a baby’s head with either hair or no hair at all. Then she goes on saying that they could have been workers or singers but she will not ever get to know. In lines five and six she is referring to how she would have raised and treated her unborn children. The way she words the sentences in the poem is hinting to the affects that she will not get to experience because they will not ever be present. The speaker continues on about how she will not ever know if her children will be thumb suckers or even get to scare away any ghosts in the night. She thinks about the good, the bad, and the sad times that she will not ever get to understand because she is speaking about unborn children and living in a fantasy. In lines nine and ten she is simply implying to seize the moment with her children and gobble them up with love if she ever had the chance. In the next part of the poem she hints that her children are dead but can hear their dim

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