The poet says that the caged Bird "can seldom see through his bars of rage". Why does the poet refer to the cage as "bars of rage"
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The bird "can seldom see through / his bars of rage," which suggests that the cage is the bird's own creation. They are "his" bars of rage, that he cannot see through. In this way the bars are a metaphor for the anger that traps the bird and keeps it from being free.
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