Poor Creatures
Poor Creatures - meaning Summary
Love Under Constant Scrutiny
The poem protests society's constant surveillance and moral policing of intimate relationships. Neruda contrasts natural creatures—frogs, birds, bulls—that engage in mating without shame with humans whose private acts are monitored, gossiped about, and militarized. The persistent public scrutiny forces lovers to invent awkward, constrained ways to be together. The closing image of lovers climaxing on a bicycle conveys humor and bitter resignation at privacy denied by social judgment.
Read Complete AnalysesWhat it takes on this planet, to make love to each other in peace. Everyone pries under your sheets, everyone interferes with your loving. They say terrible things about a man and a woman, who after much milling about, all sorts of compunctions, do something unique, they both lie with each other in one bed. I ask myself whether frogs are so furtive, or sneeze as they please. Whether they whisper to each other in swamps about illegitimate frogs, or the joys of amphibious living. I ask myself if birds single out enemy birds, or bulls gossip with bullocks before they go out in public with cows. Even the roads have eyes and the parks their police. Hotels spy on their guests, windows name names, canons and squadrons debark on missions to liquidate love. All those ears and those jaws working incessantly, till a man and his girl have to raise their climax, full tilt, on a bicycle.
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