In this first line, Dove sets the stage for the rest of the poem. The
speaker asserts indisputable rational knowledge ("I prove a theorem") and
immediately a mysterious force is set in motion ("the house expands").
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Lines 2-3
In these lines, inanimate objects, which are the product of rational
thinking, take on living and even human characteristics: "the windows jerk
free to hover near the ceiling," and "the ceiling floats away with a
sigh." This attribution of human characteristics to inanimate objects is
known as personification.
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Lines 4-6
In these lines, the mysterious force that dismantles everything that is
known and certain continues. The walls disappear, "the scent of carnations
leaves with them," and suddenly the speaker is no longer protected: "I am
out in the open." The use of carnations may suggest a celebration of
moving from one level of knowledge to another.
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Lines 7-9
In the final tercet, the transformation is complete: "above the windows
have hinged into butterflies." Windows, rationally constructed frames of
perception, have been transformed into living creatures of the imaginative
realm, "sunlight glinting where they've intersected." The poet seems to be
suggesting that where rational thought and imagination intersect there is
enlightenment. These imaginatively transformed creatures "are going to
some point true and unproven."
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Source: Exploring Poetry, Gale, 1997.