Adrienne Rich, 'Aunt Jennifer's Tigers'. Aunt Jennifer's tigers prance across a screen, Bright topaz denizens of a world of green. They do not fear the men beneath the tree; They pace in sleek chivalric certainty. Aunt Jennifer's finger fluttering through her wool. Find even the ivory needle hard to pull. – Denizen means animal that lives in a particular place & doesn’t run away fearing others. Chivalric means dignity, honour, confidence. Tigers like males live in the wild, evil forest fearlessly & move around with chivalry. Stanza-2) a) Aunt Jennifer’s fingers are moving about in an agitated & aimless manner through the wool. She is finding even the ivory needle hard to pull.
Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers
By Adrienne Rich
About the Poet
Adrienne Rich was an American poet and essayist. She was born in Baltimore, Maryland on May 16, 1929. She was brought up in a well-off family. She was the elder of two daughters. Her father was a doctor and her mother was a music composer. In 1953, she married Harvard University economist Alfred H. Conrad.
She attended Radcliffe College, graduating in 1951, and was selected by W.H. Auden for the Yale Series of Younger Poets prize. Two years later, she published her second volume of poetry, The Diamond Cutters. After having three sons before the age of thirty, Rich gradually changed both her life and her poetry. Throughout the 1960s, she wrote several collections. The content of her work became increasingly confrontational—exploring such themes as women’s role in society, racism, and the Vietnam War.
In 1997, she refused the National Medal of Arts, stating that “I could not accept such an award from White House because the very meaning of art, as I understand it, is incompatible with the cynical politics of this administration.” The same year, Rich was awarded the Academy’s Wallace Stevens Award for outstanding and proven mastery in the art of poetry. She died on March 27, 2012, at the age of eighty-two.
Poem:Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers
Aunt Jennifer’s tigers prance across a screen,
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree;
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.
Aunt Jennifer’s finger fluttering through her wool
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand.
When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.
Introduction
Adrienne Rich was brought up in a well-off family. Rich felt dominated by her father’s strong personality while growing up. It was he who most guided her as a young poet. This wasn’t always to her liking as he expected her to write her poems his way. When Rich was growing up men dominated and women were expected to become dutiful wives in their adult lives. All these elements may have influenced the picture of marriage Rich drew in this poem. At the heart of the poem is an image of a husband who controls and frightens his wife. Rich wrote a lot of poems based on everyday experience. One topic she often featured was the tension, women felt due to being dominated by their husbands. In ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’ Rich is mocking the weakness of Aunt Jennifer and the clout and authority of Jennifer’s husband in their marriage.
![Aunt Jennifer Aunt Jennifer](http://rampages.us/visualpoetry/wp-content/uploads/sites/17094/2016/06/Swaggy-tiger.jpg)
Summary
In the poem ‘Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers’ a woman expresses her suppressed feelings through her art. Aunt Jennifer is the victim of the male-dominated society. She has no one to tell her mental and physical pain. She makes a picture to convey her deep feelings. The speaker describes the tigers which her aunt produced on the panel. They are set in motion. They are moving quickly by raising the front legs and jumping forwards on the back legs. In the green jungle they look free, bright, brave, fearless and magnificent.
There are men sitting under the tree, but the tigers do not care for them. They move on to their goal boldly and smoothly. Jennifer finds it difficult to make pictures by using the ivory needle. She is tired of doing the household work after she got married. She can’t get herself involved in her artistic work. She has to do it in her leisure time. Even then she has to be sure whether her husband is watching her or not. So her hands are terrified. She will not be free from fear until she dies. She will be dominated by her husband. She will die, but her art will express her desire to move proudly and fearlessly like the tigers she has made.
Main points
- In this poem, the poet addresses the constraints of married life, experienced by a woman.
- Aunt Jennifer weaves tigers into the panel. These tigers are brave & have no fear of men.
- Aunt Jennifer is terrified by her dominating husband. Her finger flutters due to the mental suppression. She is not happy with her married life.
- She will die but her art will express her desire to move proudly and fearlessly like the tigers she has made.
Important Extracts
- Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow:
Aunt Jennifer’s tigers prance across a screen,
Bright topaz denizens of a world of green.
They do not fear the men beneath the tree:
They pace in sleek chivalric certainty.”
Q1. What does prancing tigers symbolize?
Ans. Prancing tigers are a symbol of the spirit of freedom within Aunt Jennifer which remains subdued.
Q2. Why are they referred to as ‘denizens of a world of green’?
Ans. The tigers are the dwellers of the green forest so they are referred to as denizens.
Q3. What qualities of the ‘tigers’ are highlighted here?
Ans. Fearlessness and ferocity of the tigers are highlighted here. Aunt Jennifer’s nervousness and timidity are in sharp contrast to wild ferocity of the tigers who are not afraid of hunting men. Unlike Aunt Jennifer, the tigers fear nothing.
Q4. Explain; “They pace in sleek chivalric certainty”.
Ans. The movement of the tigers are sleek, stealthy, sure, majestic and elegant. They are sure of their purpose. Gallant and confident, they move ahead fearlessly undeterred by any obstacles or hindrances.
- Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow:
Aunt Jennifer’s fingers fluttering through her wool
![Jennifer Jennifer](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125520175/876736731.jpg)
Find even the ivory needle hard to pull.
The massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band
Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand.”
Q1. Why do Aunt Jennifer’s fingers flutter through her wool?
Ans. Aunt Jennifer lives in constant fear of her husband. She feels so nervous and terrified that her hands shake and flutter when she sits down to knit.
Q2. Why does she find it hard to pull the ivory needle?
Ans. She finds it hard to pull the ivory needle more because of mental suppression than because of physical weakness. Due to constant fear that she confronts, has become a nervous wreck.
Q3. Explain: ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’.
Ans. The expression is symbolic of male authority and power. Matrimony binds the woman physically as well as mentally. Likewise Aunt Jennifer is trapped in gender oppression and feels herself burdened by the authority of her husband.
Q4. How is Aunt Jennifer affected by the ‘weight of matrimony’?
Ans. Aunt Jennifer cannot do things freely. She tries to come up to the expectation of her husband. She seems to have lost her identity. The freedom that she dreams of through her art, is itself symbolic of her oppressed self.
- Read the extract given below and answer the questions that follow:
When Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie
Still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by.
The tigers in the panel that she made
Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.”
Q1. What is Aunt Jennifer’s death symbolic of?
Ans. Aunt Jennifer’s death is symbolic of her complete submission to her suppression.
Q2. Explain: “terrified hands”.
Ans. Aunt Jennifer is terrified by her dominating husband and hence her hands are shivering.
Q3. What does ‘ringed with ordeals’ imply?
Ans. Aunt Jennifer has been so victimized in her life that even after death she remains trapped. We find her a victim of gender injustice and oppression.
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. How do the tigers made by Aunt Jennifer look like?
Ans. The tigers, made by Aunt Jennifer on the screen, are jumping and playing about without any fear of the men beneath the tree. They walk in elegance and style displaying the spirit of courage, fearlessness, strength and confidence.
Q2. What do the tigers made by the Aunt symbolize?
Ans. The tigers made by Aunt Jennifer symbolize the spirit of courage, strength and fearlessness Aunt Jennifer, a victim of male oppression, expresses her crushed feelings in the form of art. So, the tigers are symbolic of the fear of male domination with which Aunt Jennifer suffers.
Q3. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer’s hands are fluttering through her wool? Why is she finding the needle so hard to pull?
Ans. Aunt Jennifer is victimized by the overbearing and dominant nature of her husband. Her life has become a torture due to her suppression by her atrocious husband. The fear of her authoritative husband has gone so deep into her being that she seems to have lost
all strength and energy. Thus her hands shake and flutter so much that she is not even able to pull the needle through the tapestry.
Q4. What do you understand by “massive weight of uncle’s wedding band”?
Ans. Generally ‘wedding band’ is a symbol of joy and happiness. But in case of Aunt Jennifer, it has become a symbol of torture and oppression. Her relationship with her authoritative husband has become a painful burden to carry. Her ‘wedding band’ has brought her a world of pain, misery and torture. She has lost her freedom and entered a world of humiliation and oppression.
Q5. Explain ’her terrified hands will lie, still ringed with the ordeals she was mastered by’.
Ans. These lines convey Aunt’s complete submission to the oppressive authority of her husband. The fear of her husband has gone so deep into her being that even death cannot liberate her from the chains of her mental suppression. Memories of her husband’s tortures and atrocities which bent her into a humiliating slavery, will continue to haunt her even after her death.
Related posts:
Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers
What is a theme? A theme is a generally recurring subject or idea conspicuously evident in a literary work. There can be more than one theme in a story or poem and the theme can be something such as love, death, war, peace, family or journeys. In “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers,” Elizabeth Rich presents the struggle of fearlessness, assertion, and power through the literary devices of symbolism and simple rhyme.
In the first verse of “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers,” the fearlessness of Aunt Jennifer’s tigers she creates in her needlepoint is described. Aunt Jennifer is weighed down by her oppressive marriage and she likes to create the tigers in her needlepoint to help her feel as if she is not “afraid” of her marriage. Tigers represent strength and sneakiness and tigers can hide from various things. Tiger’s are very strong and can overcome anything. Knowing this, Aunt Jennifer likes to hope that she can have the strength and fearlessness like a tiger. Even though Aunt Jennifer is weighed down so much by her marriage, she likes to sew the tigers to appear “proud and unafraid”. She wants the tigers to appear as if “they do not fear the men beneath the tree; they pace in sleek chivalric certainty” (Rich). Aunt Jennifer hopes that one day she can appear as bright, happy, and fearless as the tigers she sews in her needlework. She has so much potential to get away from her terrible marriage and become strong like the tigers she envies, but it is hard for her when “the massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand” (Rich). Aunt Jennifer’s marriage makes creates a major lack of fearlessness and assertion in her life.
Assertion is a positive declaration or statement. In Aunt Jennifer’s life, there is no assertion except for the appearance of the tigers she creates in her needlepoint. The tigers create the only happiness in her life and “the tigers display in art the values that Aunt Jennifer must repress or displace in life: strength, assertion, fearlessness, fluidity of motion” (Bya). She creates the tigers with bright colors and so fearless, Aunt Jennifer wishes she could be just like them. Aunt Jennifer’s weight of her marriage and husband is holding her back so much that she has nothing positive going for her in her life except for her needlework where “tigers prance across a screen, bright topaz denizens of a world of green” (Rich). But if only Aunt Jennifer could gain fearlessness and assertion, she could possibly gain power.
To be powerless is no way to live. To have no power in your life or to not be in control of many things around you can emotionally and sometimes even physically harm yourself. Aunt Jennifer’s marriage has left her powerless because she does nothing but knit and knitting is the only power that she feels she has. Even when Aunt Jennifer has passed away, “her terrified hands will lie still ringed with ordeals she was mastered by” (Rich). Her “chivalric certainty” is her own “envisioned power but it is essentially a suturing image, at once stitching up and reasserting the rift between her actual social status an her vision” (Bya). So as long as Aunt Jennifer can envision the power, she has the power and strength to create an even greater power in the needlework of her tigers.
There are many different types of themes in stories. Some stories may even have more than one theme. A theme is a generally recurring subject or idea conspicuously evident in a literary work. In “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers,” Elizabeth Rich presents the struggle of fearlessness, assertion, and power through the literary devices of symbolism and simple rhyme.
Reference
Byars, Thomas B. “On “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers”” Modern American Poetry. The Kent State
University Press, 1990. Web. 1 Feb. 2010. http://www.english.illinois.edu/Maps/poets/m_r/rich/tigers.htm
Rich, Adrienne. “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers.” 1929. Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing. Sixth ed. X. J. Kennedy, 2007. 414-14.v
Rich, Adrienne. “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers.” 1929. Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing. Sixth ed. X. J. Kennedy, 2007. 414-14.