Chicks
Chicks - meaning Summary
Emigrant at the Gate
Carl Sandburg’s "Chicks" uses the literal hatching of a chick as a simple image to explore beginnings, movement, and the questions that follow arrival. The chick's cheeps mark entry into a larger world and stand in for any newcomer confronting choices. Sandburg contrasts this small, natural emergence with human institutions—academies, circuses, clubs—suggesting social destinations are often ordinary or performative. The tone is observant and quietly ironic about where life leads.
Read Complete AnalysesTHE CHICK in the egg picks at the shell, cracks open one oval world, and enters another oval world. 'Cheep... cheep... cheep' is the salutation of the newcomer, the emigrant, the casual at the gates of the new world. 'Cheep... cheep'... from oval to oval, sunset to sunset, star to star. It is at the door of this house, this teeny weeny eggshell exit, it is here men say a riddle and jeer each other: who are you? where do you go from here? (In the academies many books, at the circus many sacks of peanuts, at the club rooms many cigar butts.) 'Cheep... cheep'... from oval to oval, sunset to sunset, star to star.
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