Monarch’s Lament
Natural
History or Political Satire?
Poem
by Nathaniel Hellerstein:
Last
night, I dreamed that I conversed with a Monarch butterfly. How beautiful it
was, and how bitter! This is what it sang:
Bitter
my life and bitter my death;
Bitter
my food and bitter my flesh!
Yet
it sang so sweetly!
I
wondered why, so I pursued it, calling out, “Beautiful bug, what ails you?”
The
Monarch replied:
Milkweed!
Milkweed! All I can eat!
How
I love its vile flavor!
How
deep I drank its toxic sap!
Are
not my wings beautiful?
Are
they not bright and attractive?
But
why do the birds all shy away?
Why
do they seek plainer bugs to snap up?
Perhaps
they do not find me to their taste?
My
wings say poison, my wings say death;
Bright
and vivid, my wings say do not eat.
Bitter
my life and bitter my death;
Bitter
my food and bitter my flesh!
I
said, “By diet, you defend yourself from diet;
So
what, O beautiful bug, is your complaint?”
The
Monarch said:
You
think me beautiful? Birds think me hideous!
I
said, “I would catch you and stick you on a pin,
you’re
so beautiful.”
The
Monarch replied:
But
riddle me this, O Ape of Wisdom:
Are
you a man dreaming of a talking butterfly,
or
am I a butterfly dreaming of a talking man?
And
I suddenly knew that the insect was right!
“This
is a dream!” I cried, and I started to waken.
The
Monarch Butterfly fluttered up higher and higher, beyond my grasp. Rising, it
sang:
Sweet
my flesh and sweet my food
Sweet
my death and sweet my life!
The
butterfly escaped, the dream ended, and I awoke, shouting, “It lied to me!” For I had realized too late that the bug was a
counterfeit!
It wasn’t a real
Monarch butterfly; it was instead the toxic Monarch’s merely foul-tasting
imitator, the Viceroy!
Questions by Sylvia Rippel:
1.
What does the poem as a whole mean?
2.
Describe the Monarch and interpret its
significance.
3.
Why does the Monarch lament its
condition?
4.
What ails the Monarch?
5.
Why do the birds shy away?
6.
Who is the dreamer?
7.
What is the difference between the Monarch
and the Viceroy?
Replies by Nathaniel Hellerstein:
What
does the poem as a whole mean?
This
poem contains many separate meanings, including:
Power
corrupts;
Truth
is elusive;
Beauty
is in the eye of the beholder;
Life
is fleet and bittersweet;
Et cetera, ad nauseum. The poem, as a
whole, means none of these things; its meaning is the elusive beauty and guile
of the butterfly itself. This poem describes a fabulous monster as strange as
any dragon yet as common as any insect.
The
poem’s last word reveals that everything preceding was a deception. Perhaps
such a poem means nothing at all.
Describe
the Monarch and interpret its significance.
The Monarch butterfly
defends itself from avian predation by a
milkweed diet and bright markings. The milkweed makes the insect’s flesh toxic;
its bright wings warn birds of its inedibility. This defense has a flaw; it
attracts human attention and insect imitation.
In “Monarch’s Lament”,
these entymological facts acquire satirical overtones. A tiny bug’s struggles
are compared to the maneuvers of the rich and powerful. This poem is an insect
exposé; a study of politics in miniature.
Why
does the Monarch lament its condition?
The Monarch (actually,
the Viceroy) seems to lament, but in fact it rejoices. It bewails its lot, but
its complaints are insincere. Not even a bird-brain would swallow such a
belly-acher. It cries:
Bitter my life and bitter my death;
Bitter
my food and bitter my flesh!
to celebrate its
triumphant release from avian oppression. The bug’s seemingly mournful dirge is
really a cry of joy.
The Monarch’s lament is
not a real lament; and what’s more, the Monarch itself is not a real Monarch!
Thus this poem’s title misleads the reader not once, but twice.
What
ails the Monarch?
The Monarch is an
artist; therefore it must endure the four plagues which afflict all artists,
namely; patronage, critics, fans and
rivals.
Patronage
– i.e. milkweed.
The butterfly
complains:
Milkweed!
Milkweed! All I can eat!
This means two things;
both that it can have as much milkweed as it wishes (for no other bug will
touch the awful stuff), and also that this bitter fare is its obligatory diet.
The Monarch must eat;
and no-one else wants what it must have, for good reason.
Critics
– i.e. the birds.
The Monarch’s toxic
diet and gaudy wings are messages to birds, its most rigorous critics. The
birds hold the Monarch up to the highest standard of bad taste.
Fans
– i.e. humans.
The hapless Monarch
fends of avian attack only to discover that its defense mechanism draws
unwanted attention from greedy humans. From the Monarch’s point of view, birds
are at least honestly hostile; but these crazy clever bald apes will admire a
bug by killing it. What a deadly dilemma!
Rivals
– i.e. the Viceroy.
This one is worst of
all; for we never did meet the real Monarch, only its imitator, a disgusting
forger. After surviving poison, birds and humans, the bitter bug finds its
minuscule thunder stolen by plagiaristic vermin.
Why
do the birds shy away?
Birds see the
butterfly’s wings and identify it as either Viceroy or Monarch; either foul or
toxic, and in neither case worth pursuing. Birds instinctively see them as
ugly; for beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Who
is the dreamer?
But
riddle me this, O Ape of Wisdom:
Are
you a man dreaming of a talking butterfly,
or
am I a butterfly dreaming of a talking man?
The false Monarch
royally mocks primate folly; then it retells Chuang Tzu’s dream koan, “Am I a
man dreaming that I’m a butterfly, or a butterfly dreaming that I’m a man?”
Recall also Chuang
Tzu’s fable of the Useless Tree; a “stinkwood” tree so twisted, rotten and
worthless that no carpenter would even look at it – just as the Useless Tree
planned. “Monarch’s Lament” combines these two Taoist fables; it’s about a
Useless Butterfly – and its imitator.
Who is the dreamer? Who
is the dream?
I am the dreamer. I am
the dream.
But who am I?
What
is the difference between the Monarch and the Viceroy?
The
Monarch bewails its bitter fate; the wails are insincere but the bitterness is
genuine. Perhaps the alkaloids in its diet affect its tiny brain. In any case,
it has surely earned its gaudy wings.
The
Viceroy lacks the Monarch’s bitter integrity. It is an upstart insect that
pretends to be dangerous when in fact it is merely disgusting. It doesn’t need
milkweed; it tastes awful all by itself. The Viceroy is a symbolic parasite. It
bitterly admits the shameful truth:
Sweet
my flesh and sweet my food
Sweet
my death and sweet my life!
-
only at the moment of escape. Its life
is a lie.
The poem also lies; for the Viceroy’s
deception fools not only the birds, but also the dreamer – and through the
dreamer, the reader. “Monarch’s Lament” is a non-lament by a non-monarch; not
one single word in its title is true. Beware!
Remember;
it was all just a dream. That butterfly never existed in the first place!
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