19 pages • 38 minutes read
Li-Young LeeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Two splinters appear in this poem, and as all readers of poetry should know, repetition signifies emphasis. Lee’s wife’s splinter brings back the memory of his own splinter when he was seven. Both of these splinters are occasions for tenderness on the behalf of the caregiver; as a result, they both symbolize the suffering of everyday life and the relief love can bestow. Both require “measures of tenderness” (Line 10) and “flames of discipline” (Line 12) to remove. The older episode is also transformed, in Lee’s version of the audience’s perspective, into “planting something in a boy’s palm / a silver tear, a tiny flame” (Lines 16-17). In this way, the splinter becomes not just a symbol of suffering but also one of growth. Once removed from the body, the splinter is a seed that will grow in place of that wound, leading to the tenderness the husband shows his wife.
In “The Gift,” hands symbolize both the place where suffering resides and the accomplished skill necessary to relieve such suffering. Lee’s father must “pull the metal splinter from my palm” in Line 1, while years later, “I shave her thumbnail down” (Line 21).
By Li-Young Lee
Early in the Morning
Early in the Morning
Li-Young Lee
Eating Alone
Eating Alone
Li-Young Lee
Eating Together
Eating Together
Li-Young Lee
From Blossoms
From Blossoms
Li-Young Lee
I Ask My Mother to Sing
I Ask My Mother to Sing
Li-Young Lee
Persimmons
Persimmons
Li-Young Lee