Today we
derailed from the John Donne track of poems we have been on the past few class
periods and looked at the poem Anyone
lived in a pretty how town by E.E. Cummings. Before I start I must confess
something that is making my grammar OCD go through the roof: why isn’t the
whole title of the poem capitalized? Could it possibly be a typing error or is
it because Cummings specifically wants it that way? Whatever the reason, it
really annoys me.
Okay back
to what I was saying! I really liked this poem in comparison to Donne’s poems
because Anyone who lived in a pretty how
town is much easier to read, and it is much more fun to read due to its
rhyming schemes and the song-like way it rolls off your tongue. Not only is it
the easy reading of Anyone who lived in a
pretty how town that I like, it is the message it presents.
Cummings paints the picture of a
depressed town where everything is fake and everyone just goes through the
motions. Throughout the poem, Cummings uses the repetition of the lines,
“summer autumn winter spring” and “stars rain sun moon” to show the monotony of
the town. Days and seasons pass, people go about their day and the counterfeit
smiles adorn the folk’s faces. In a sense, these lines literally represent the
robotic-like attitude of the townspeople E.E. Cummings is trying to portray.
Nobody shows any REAL emotion and
nobody cares about anyone else in the town. The quote, “Women and men (both
little and small) cared for anyone not at all” embodies the lack of compassion
Cummings writes about. I also think Cummings implies that any empathy that is
shown is not genuine in the slightest. Sounds like a pretty melancholic place
to live!
I almost feel like parts of Anyone lived in a pretty how town can be
seen in DeWitt, and more specifically, in DHS; especially the monotony. Every
year, students file in and file out, each with their heads down. Nobody looks
up and expresses emotion. We are like zombies in that respect! Students seem to
be emotionless creatures just taking up space and making our limbs move. The
lone exception is the wonderfully ecstatic Abby Ruch, who is always spewing her
thoughts, emotion, and overall spontaneity. Besides Abby, everyone has their
routine. They must there at that time, no exceptions. I will say that I am part
of the epidemic, especially during the high tide of the fall months. Now that I
ponder this, it is almost depressing. I need to inject some emotion and some
laughter into each day, or I might possibly turn into a robot/zombie after all.
I need a living and breathing interjection!
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