Who are you, little i ?
by e e cummings
The poem ‘Who
are you little I’ depicts a child looking out a window in the evening. It
presents about nature; and how it has impact to the speaker. It presents
recalling childhood memories in relation to nature. It presents the positive impact of nature in
human life.
The speaker is a boy of five or six years old who keeps peering through some
high window at the beautiful golden sunset of November and pondering the
wonderful transformation of the day into night in a very beautiful way.
The
poem begins with a description of the boy who is standing at window to see
outer world. He observes self within self. He observes the natural world so
fascinating. He finds the twilight of the evening is so fascinating that he
prefers to watch it. The word in parenthesis ‘five or six year child’ presents
the natural world. As children do not have any artificiality, the speaker uses
the word to give more emphasis. He has seen such world or twilight many times.
However, he finds it more fascinating today simply because he is observing it
from the perspective of a natural stage of life, childhood. He gets confused in
such situation. He questions himself why it is so different today. The opening
line of the poem ‘who are you, little i’, presents his dilemma. The way he
questions himself presents inferiority complex.
He is observing from some high window. It refers he is far away from the
reality. He has not in the ground of reality. His observance of sunset is
really far from reality. The use of semicolon in the poem after window
represents the a pause or changes in life.
The
poem can be divided into two different parts. The first part refers to his
mental state and second part presents his inferiority. The first part goes up
line five. He remembers how he used to enjoy such a beauty when he used to be a
little boy of five or six years. It is wonder that he still has youthful
presence in himself. It helps him recognize the beauty of the evening. The
second part moves ahead from the six lines to till the end of the poem. It
presents his nostalgic mood. The second
part presents his desire of liberation. He wants to liberate from captive of
adulthood or manhood. The line “if the day has to become the night that is a
beautiful way” presents his inner heart he wants to come out; however, his
maturity does not allow him to do so. The use of conditional sentence depicts
that he wants to enjoy the beauty of the nature. It implies that we can have the memories of
the childhood with us. However, our responsibilities and pressure of so-called
maturity exhume our naturalistic pleasure. The speaker puts adult worries and
wants to enjoy the life.
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