Thursday, May 8, 2014

The Metaphoric Meaning of Blue Jays


In Mark Twain’s short story, "What Stumped the Blue Jays", he writes about a blue jay that comes across an antagonizing problem. The story starts out by talking about a blue jay that comes across an abandoned house with a whole in the roof. The bird wanted to know where the whole went so he dropped an acorn down it, and listened for it to drop. When he didn’t hear the acorn drop he went and got more and more acorns to listen for them. When he got to tired of retrieving acorns, he began to sit on top of the house swearing at the whole, so he called in other blue jays to come observe for themselves. When more and more birds arrive and place an acorn down the hole they all began to speculate about theories of where the acorns are going. At the end of the story one of the birds opens the front door of the house and finds all the acorns on the floor of the house, and all of the birds begin to laugh that the acorns were on the floor the whole time.
In this story, Twain is signifying that the blue jays are actually humans. He even stated in the book, “a jay is everything that a man is. A jay can cry, a jay can laugh, a jay can feel shame, a jay can reason and plan and discuss, a jay likes gossip and scandal, a jay has got a sense of humor, a jay knows when he is an ass just as well as you do - maybe better. If a jay ain't human, he better take in his sign, that's all” (Pg. 160). By those quote Twain is saying that blue jays and humans are so closely related. I believe that Twain is not talking about blue jays at all in the story. I think he is taking it one step further and the whole story is about humans. Throughout the whole story, Twain expresses this in many different ways, such as through personality and problem solving.
Personality is a large characteristic that makes humans identity what it is. Twain talks about personality in the story by saying that jays will lie, steal, deceive, and betray. These negative personifications for the blue jays are directly reflected on humans and I believe that this is a direct insinuation on the people around Twain at the time. This could have been because this story took place post civil war, but only by about ten years, and there was still a lot of backstabbing and lying going on at that time.
The second reason of why the blue jays symbolize humans is because people have different ways of coping with difficult problems. Some swear at the problem, while others theorize about why the problem is happening, and finally others will search for a different approach to the problem. All of these different approaches, when working together, can solve any problem, even just a simple hole in the roof. Twain exemplifies this by stating, “There must have been five thousand of them; and such another jawing and disputing and ripping and cussing, you never heard. Every jay in the whole lot put his eye to the hole and delivered a more chuckle-headed opinion about the mystery than the jay that went there before him”(Pg. 162). This quote shows when the problem of the hole was at its ultimate annoyance and how the different jays worked through the problem.
Mark Twain’s personification of the blue jays is directly related to humans in the story of what stumped the blue jays. Through his connection of personality and problem solving he exemplifies his metaphoric meaning of the story, which is that the blue jays are actually humans.

References:
Twain, Mark, and Charles Neider. The Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain. New York: Bantam, 1981. Print.

2 comments:

  1. I do agree that Twain is trying to personify the Blue Jays in the story to a certain extent but I think it is in a more figurative way, meaning I don't think he is ACTUALLY speaking about humans and really just trying to point out the similarities between the two species.The qualities he uses to describe the birds are seemingly very human-like yes, but I think the actual story is still about actual Blue Jays and Twain is attempting to make a commentary about society and the nature of humans, and birds, by using this as a metaphor.

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  2. I have to agree with you. Mark Twain personifies blue jays as humans to convey his point; people handle problems differently. Some of the blue jays got frustrated and left, while others stayed and tried to solve the problem. Another point about human nature that can stem from the story is the curiosity of human nature. Once a problem could not be solved, news traveled fast and flocks of blue jays arrived and tried to settle the problem.

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