THE PAWNSHOP
Beauty runs a pawnshop,
Accepting only the hearts of men.
When the time comes for them to redeem their belongings,
She has already closed the door.
Kai-yu Hsu
World Poetry: An anthology of verse from antiquity to our time: - Katharine Washburn & John S. Major (1998 QBP club)
"The pawnshop" represents many things to me. Perhaps a timeless event such as wanting what one can't have and searching for a way to obtain it, a woman who can lure a man into anything with simple suggestion. On the other hand, the writer could be speaking, in fact, of just a pawnshop. The pawnshop metaphor embraces the reader to interpret their views within the reading of the poem.
"The Pawnshop" is only four lines long, yet speaks not only of a timeless subject but with volumes of feeling. I believe this is one of the best examples of implied metaphor I have come across. With the opening line "Beauty runs a pawnshop," and the last line of the writing "She has already closed the door," makes me believe this can only be about a beautiful woman. The second line also supports this with "Accepting only the hearts of men." Women the historical root of all evil, bringing the purity and strength of man down. Why not imply the beauty and entrapping power of a woman with the dealings of a pawnshop? …show more content…
A pawnshop offers many people -- mostly men -- with a chance to profit from products that hold past dreams and memories.
Most women would not take that option unless their dreams were crushed and the memories haunting. Down and out, for one reason or another, men take chances with their dreams, giving up something in hopes to receive riches of greater value, that one big break. The passing of time takes the toll when collection comes and the doors are closed. Life is short; you can't always get back what you lost or hold onto what you have. The pawnshop is classic of past and present human
behavior.
"The Pawnshop," I believe, holds not only implied metaphor, metaphor but also apostrophe and metonymy with the correlation between a pawnshop and a lady. The dictation clearly shows that the store is not a store at all but holds human characteristics. Within this tiny 26 word poem one finds the imagery to set his or her mind toward a living, breathing event in ones own life or correlation of, involving someone else. "The Pawnshop," written between 1904 and 1933, is just as affective now as it was when put down on paper for the first time. The differences in men and women will always present new forms of poetry and writing. A man's strength is at its weakest when dealing with a figure of beauty, his heart will surely be given away. When his brain comes back to reality, it may be too late; just as the last line states,"She has already closed the door." Television shows, movies, one's own heart ache is proof enough that this poem holds true symbolism for today and the future to come. This is why I believe the poem "The Pawnshop" should be included in "Responding to Literature." Short, sweet and to the point of wherever your mind and heart take you.