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18 pages 36 minutes read

Paul Laurence Dunbar

Dawn

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1912

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Symbols & Motifs

Night

Night is a sleeping creature—not “like” one sound asleep (simile) but actually a sleeping being (metaphor, personification). Night is stirred to wakefulness by a kiss from an angel. Night blushes and that becomes the stunning spectrum of colors of a sunrise.

In creating a character called Night, the poem endows a neutral thing with human characteristics—a literary strategy known as personification. In gifting Night with human characteristics—the capital letter, the ability to sleep, the capacity to blush, and the vulnerability of a sensitive innocent stirred to wakefulness by the white-robed angel—Dunbar endows the otherwise impersonal forces and phenomena of the natural world with personality and emotions. Dunbar knows the night does not sleep and cannot blush. To position humanity within that natural world denies nature any energy by restricting human interaction with it. It is difficult for humans to feel close to a planet slowly revolving back toward the sun. By upcycling the night into Night against the logic of the natural sciences, the poem invites the reader into the drama of a sunrise and kindles the possibility of the imagination given free rein over any natural phenomena. Night takes on the characteristics of a human; Dunbar’s use of personification creates a sense of quiet beauty and vulnerability. In so doing, Night invites the reader to become more a part of the natural world since one of its elements, the night, now feels more personal.

The Kiss

The dominant action in the narrative of Dunbar’s poem is the kiss, bestowed on a reclining (and unaware) Night by a white-robed sprite identified as an angel. The kiss is a loaded symbol. While kissing is mostly considered an act of affection, a kiss can also be viewed as a daring intrusion of another or a violation of private space. It is at once gentle and unselfish and yet assaultive and self-serving. To represent nature’s movement into dawn as the result of a kiss—a kiss delivered without warning and without expectation or anticipation—suggests Dunbar’s perception of Night as a victim: that the shattering into color of the sky in the morning is a violent usurpation of the darkness.

But Dunbar is too much the Romantic to suggest that the coming of dawn is some kind of assault, even a symbolic one. Rather the kiss—not the seduction, just the light flutter of a gentle kiss—stirs the Night into light. By using the symbol of a kiss—the reader understands there is no implied ravishment as once the kiss is delivered and the sprite is gone, the poem recreates the feel of watching the dawn unfold, dawn itself kissed into wakefulness. Using the kiss, the poem suggests Dawn is a gentle (harmless) movement toward light and color.

Blushing

The poem compares the colors of a sunrise to the blush in a cheek after being kissed awake. Blushing is a complicated emotional reaction that manages to say yes and no at the same time. Blushing both welcomes emotional interaction and precludes that same interaction. Unlike the red colors of breathless carnal indulgence typical of the poetry of seduction, the blush suggests an innocence. It signals a profound level of emotional response: The colors rising in the cheeks manages to say more than any words might convey.

The blush then creates a sense of nature’s gentle complicity in the movement from nighttime into morning. Like all blushes, the blush here says yes as well as no—yes, welcome to the morning, welcome to the colors, the dazzle, the majesty; but remember, this stunning show cannot endure. It is at best a tease before the world settles into the quiet of morning. By personifying this momentary phenomenon, by calling it “Dawn,” humanity (in the last line) prepares to make the moment’s dazzling show into a something more permanent, coopting a phenomenon that is as gorgeous as it is momentary into a tidy little word. The word “Dawn,” then, serves to suggest, as any blush does, the paucity of language: Sunrise (like a kiss) an experience that is beyond words that may elicit an emotional response.

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