Hope Is A Thing With Feathers
Hope Is A Thing With Feathers
Hope Is A Thing With Feathers
Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops - at all And sweetest - in the Gale - is heard And sore must be the storm That could abash the little Bird
That kept so many warm Ive heard it in the chillest land And on the strangest Sea Yet - never - in Extremity,
It asked a crumb - of me.
The poet examines and explains the importance of hope in the heart of a human being.
Moreover, she signifies that hope is not just a motionless creature but can fly anywhere to
everywhere in order to provide a sense of comfort for the one who are in the times of
discomfort.
The poet denotes that the hope is like a bird with feathers. It is the feathers which help the
bird to fly, to travel from one place to another, to help it assemble the food and nest for its
survival. On the same lines, the feeling of hope is compared with a bird with feathers. It
means that the hope in the heart of a person helps a person provide comfort and coziness in
times of pain and hardships.
The author says that hope is a thing with feathers. Here, it means that the hope is like a
feeling which has no limits. This feeling is so strong that it settle deep inside the soul of the
person.
This means that the feeling of hope is so attached and strong that it cannot be taken off easily.
Next, the author says that this feeling of hope is so sweet that it is equivalent to like singing
song without any words.
Here, we know that each and every song is incomplete without meaningful, emotional and
passionate words, but this feel of hope is so beautiful and powerful that even it resembles a
lovely song which is not dependent on the words to be completed or sweet.
Just like a song causes the sense of comfort, eases out our discomfort, and makes the mood
light and joyful; similarly the feeling of hope provides comfort and gives strength to provide
joy in the heart of people who believes strongly on hope. The author further says that this
positive element of hope is not temporary but is permanent in nature. It is continuous and
never ending.
Next, the poet highlights the strong and furious circumstances in which this feeling of hope
helps one survive in the roughness the situation causes. This sweetness of hope is best seen in
case of strong winds or a storm.
In means, that in case of wildest and toughest circumstances in the lives of people, the one
who keeps this feeling with himself, the maximum benefits of this hope can be visualized.
This storm is compared with being sour means that it is the hardest of the entire tough and
rough situations, the feeling of hope provide comfort and ease that we shall be able to rise
over this storm with ease.
Now the poet is worried that what if this bird of hope be abashed? It means that the storm is
so severe to let down this bird, which will shake up the hope in oneself. No matter it is
abashed, yet it provides the warmth in the heart of those who keep this feeling of hope.
Not just storm, the other hard circumstance where the poet examines this positive feeling of
hope is the snow covered chilly lands, and the deep strange sea where one can easily wander
and get lost. In other words, one should keep the will power high filled with this feeling of
hope even in the extreme of extremes situations.
The best part of this little yet strong and powerful bird is that it provides so much warmth,
comfort, fearlessness, power and strength even in the times of touch situations, this bird does
not ask for anything in return. It means that one should always be hopeful of positive things
in life, since it provides all positive attitudes of life and helps one rise above all extremities
and the best part is that in return, it does not ask for even a small part or fragment in return.
Summary
The speaker describes hope as a bird (the thing with feathers) that perches in the soul.
There, it sings wordlessly and without pause. The song of hope sounds sweetest in the
Gale, and it would require a terrifying storm to ever abash the little Bird / That kept so
many warm. The speaker says that she has heard the bird of hope in the chillest land /
And on the strangest Sea, but never, no matter how extreme the conditions, did it ever ask
for a single crumb from her.
Form
Like almost all of Dickinsons poems, Hope is the thing with feathers... takes the form
of an iambic trimeter that often expands to include a fourth stress at the end of the line (as in
And sings the tune without the words). Like almost all of her poems, it modifies and
breaks up the rhythmic flow with long dashes indicating breaks and pauses (And never stops
at all). The stanzas, as in most of Dickinsons lyrics, rhyme loosely in an ABCB
scheme, though in this poem there are some incidental carryover rhymes: words in line
three of the first stanza rhymes with heard and Bird in the second; Extremity rhymes
with Sea and Me in the third stanza, thus, technically conforming to an ABBB rhyme
scheme.
Commentary
This simple, metaphorical description of hope as a bird singing in the soul is another example
of Dickinsons homiletic style, derived from Psalms and religious hymns. Dickinson
introduces her metaphor in the first two lines (Hope is the thing with feathers / That
perches in the soul), then develops it throughout the poem by telling what the bird does
(sing), how it reacts to hardship (it is unabashed in the storm), where it can be found
(everywhere, from chillest land to strangest Sea), and what it asks for itself (nothing, not
even a single crumb). Though written after Success is counted sweetest, this is still an early
poem for Dickinson, and neither her language nor her themes here are as complicated and
explosive as they would become in her more mature work from the mid-1860s. Still, we find
a few of the verbal shocks that so characterize Dickinsons mature style: the use of abash,
for instance, to describe the storms potential effect on the bird, wrenches the reader back to
the reality behind the pretty metaphor; while a singing bird cannot exactly be abashed, the
word describes the effect of the stormor a more general hardshipupon the speakers
hopes