- The speaker of this poem is part of a museum's exhibit. The speaker is left genderless, nameless, and even eraless. Northrop only offers the description of a "bowed / insulting background--haze // of hope & atmosphere" for the exhibit.
- The poem's first sentence ("I am not like you.") immediately establishes a contrast between the speaker and its audience that continues throughout the poem. Northrop leaves the identity of this audience ambiguous--while, perhaps, a literal viewer of the exhibit, this "you" is just as likely the reader of the poem.
- In lines 7-8, Northrop alters the expected syntax to "What you have done // with your hands?"
- Enjambments are the overwhelming norm for this poem at a 29:8 ratio. Even in non-enjambed lines, Northrop only uses a period at the end of the poem to end a line.
- The poet establishes a comparison between the stillness and endurance of the past and the (supposedly) more mobile yet fleeting present. While the speaker characterizes its existence within the museum with the "steady click" of the fan and by acknowledging that the "wind's implicit", it also appreciates that it is "free to remain here". The speaker characterizes this stillness as potential and then spent energy in its criticism of the modern audience: "What do you know // of drawn arrow, of spent shell?" When describing the modern world, the poem describes "schools of temporary children" and motion that is either reversed ("return to your cars and coats"), incremental ("step from the garage"), or altogether stationary ("roads stacked with traffic")
Monday, January 24, 2011
Sign Inventory, Kate Northrop's "Museum Diorama"
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