In "Cinderella," the magical tree and bird are Cinderella's magical buddies. Supposedly she's a "good" and "devout" (25) girl, and so maybe she deserved this supernatural help, but Cinderella would be nothing in this poem without the constant aid of magic. The poem uses the supernatural as a kind of extended metaphor for how frustrating Cinderella stories actually are. Practically everything is handed to the heroine with no work involved on her part. No fair-sies! The example stories in the beginning are a little different—they don't involve the supernatural—but there's an element of supernatural intervention to them anyway. (Read more about this in the "Luck/Fortune" theme.)
Questions About The Supernatural
- How is the supernatural related to the events in the beginning of the poem (which are not, strictly speaking, supernatural at all)?
- What might the wish-laying white dove symbolize in this poem?
- Why do you think Cinderella never wishes for anything more than gowns from the white dove?
Chew on This
The white dove in "Cinderella" is a complicated little bird (like Tweety, but way deeper). It represents both compassion for the needy, but also a free hand-out that no one deserves.
Nice try, but the supernatural forces in this poem don't actually help Cinderella at all.