0
Julielai Posted 20 years ago

old age sticks by e. e. cummings

Here's the poem:

http://www.palace.net/~llama/poetry/oldage

I have to admit: I care for neither the punctuation nor the word splitting. The (, &, and word-splits just make the poem "cutesy". I prefer "in just-": http://www.web-books.com/Classics/Poetry/Anthology/cummings/InJust.htm .

But I know next to nothing about poetry.

Do others find the poem effective?
  

Top answer

e. cummings, Julie-- because I don't understand what he's getting at, usually. About these two particular poems, my reaction is that in just- may be more attractive because of its playful coined images ( mud-luscious and puddle-wonderful ), which old age sticks does not have.

  • e.
  • cummings, Julie-- because I don't understand what he's getting at, usually.
  • About these two particular poems, my reaction is that in just- may be more attractive because of its playful coined images ( mud-luscious and puddle-wonderful ), which old age sticks does not have.
  • What the latter does hold for me is the ultra-simple staccato of the innate antipathy between youth and age.
  • But, no, I can't match up the parentheses to their mates either-- perhaps there's an on-line exegesis somewhere....
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

8 Answers
0
I'm not a fan of e.e. cummings, Julie-- because I don't understand what he's getting at, usually. About these two particular poems, my reaction is that in just- may be more attractive because of its playful coined images (mud-luscious and puddle-wonderful), which old age sticks does not have. What the latter does hold for me is the ultra-simple staccato
0
Thanks. Just a silly question: How would you read the poems to demonstrate the unusual spellings and spacing?

e.g.

"bettyandisbel", "eddieandbill" or "gr
owing old"? Would you speed up or slow down?

Thanks!
0
Not silly, certainly, but probably unanswerable in the absolute. I'm sure that every reader would take his own tack. Myself, I'd read the boys' names and the girls' names much as we'd say them anyway-- and that is probably what e.e. intended: Eddie 'n' Bill. As for gr/owing: I'd guess that e.e. wanted us to stretch it out a bit, is all... over two lines at least.
0
0 The open ended parentheses leads us back to the beginning where youth just keeps on growing old...age sticks. It is a never ending cycle and a beautiful poem. 0-
0
what is this poem really about
0
I find this to be one of cummings' best poems. It's all about the conflict between adults and/or authority who set up rules and young people who rebel. Notice that everything that "old age" says is IN parentheses (signifying their stifling control) and everything that "youth" says is OUTSIDE of parenthese (signifying freedom). Much if what "old age" says begins with a capital (signifying aut
0
Word play and unusual spatial arrangement of words and symbols are two of cummings’s most significant contributions to modern poetry. Cummings drew and painted from an early age, and his poems often reflect his interest in visual representation of the world. Like a visual artist, he bent, broke, twisted, and reshaped the material of his poetic craft — language.

In “old age sticks” cumming
0
well I thought the was to recite one of his last poems, im not for sure though

Related Questions