July 11, 2004, 19:55
Hic et ubiqueIs this a "metaphor"?
quote:
Some say summer is for recreation,
But me? I prefer relaxation.
In my hammock I snore
And (to use metaphor)
I’m not lazy. It’s just aestivation.
Tim had questioned whether this usage of
aestivation (variant of
estivation) could truly be called a "metaphor". I see his point. But is this figurative usage indeed a metaphor, and if not, what
do you call it?
AEstivation: The state of torpidity induced by the heat and dryness of summer, as in certain snails; -- opposed to hibernation.
Hic,
I think it is a great metaphor!
If I had to distinguish them:
Metaphor: my laziness is me going underground for summer.
Figurative: I am literally going underground or somewhere you could almost call underground, for summer or a period you could almost call summer. (But not literally both underground and summer.)
July 12, 2004, 11:35
Chris J. StrolinI don't see it as a metaphor since you are saying that your relative inaction actually
is aestivation. A metaphor is like "My brother is an albatross around my neck." Unless you actually happen to be related to sea birds, the albatross here is a metaphor meaning "burden" or whatever. In the limerick, you actually
are inactive (or lazy, torpid, whatever) so the concept of a metaphor doesn't seem to apply.
July 13, 2004, 07:38
<Asa Lovejoy>"...like 'My brother is an albatross around my neck.'"
No, no, CJ, as/like comparisons are similes!

So, you've got a metaphor used as a simile! Neat trick!
July 13, 2004, 12:45
Chris J. StrolinI thought that the "is/like" distinction was exactly the difference between the two terms.
"All the world's a stage" (Shakespeare) = metaphor, while
"All the world
is like a stage" (Me, not nearly as effective) = simile.
No?