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Comment 5 of 15, added on November 2nd, 2005 at 3:18 PM.
I believe the poem is talking about her father. In the poem she spent
thirty years trying to put the "statue" back together to no avail. This
represented her trying to get over her fathers death and realizing that it
would never be. The poem describes how she trys to put her father "back
together" and she isn't getting anywhere.
Natasha from United States
Comment 4 of 15, added on October 21st, 2005 at 12:16 AM.
The poem is obviously referencing her father. The great god, looming over
her throughout her life. the entity she could never forsake, nor live up
to. The unwavering figure of masculinity encompassing a sort of Greek
tragedy. At least that's what I understood it to be.
Carissa from United States
Comment 3 of 15, added on October 4th, 2005 at 8:31 PM.
Some people will just never understand..
Annie from United States
Comment 2 of 15, added on June 8th, 2005 at 11:03 AM.
A female poet couldn't be crazy and depressed in a genius way could she?
THAT would be a privilege to a man of course. I mean, please, isn't there
any laundery to do?
frede from Belgium
Comment 1 of 15, added on May 19th, 2005 at 12:32 PM.
No wonder she killed herself! She was obsessed with a mythical statue. I
bet when she found out it wasn't real, it tore her apart. Ohhhh yeah, the
fact that she was a crazy, depressed poet didn't help.
Jaque Strap from United States
This poem has been commented on more than 10 times. Click below to see the other comments.
1 [2]
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I believe the poem is talking about her father. In the poem she spent
thirty years trying to put the "statue" back together to no avail. This
represented her trying to get over her fathers death and realizing that it
would never be. The poem describes how she trys to put her father "back
together" and she isn't getting anywhere.
Natasha from United States