The Man Whose Pharynx Was Bad
The Man Whose Pharynx Was Bad - meaning Summary
Stagnation Amid Seasonal Change
The poem presents a speaker numbed by routine and seasonal sameness. Summer and winter merge into an indifferent cycle that dulls creativity and feeling. The speaker imagines an ideal season—extended, intense, transformative—that might break this malaise and restore inventive speech, but acknowledges that time will not yield such a perfect change. The tone is resigned: possibility is entertained, then dismissed, leaving a persistent sense of stasis.
Read Complete AnalysesThe time of year has grown indifferent. Mildew of summer and the deepening snow Are both alike in the routine I know: I am too dumbly in my being pent. The wind attendant on the solstices Blows on the shutters of the metropoles, Stirring no poet in his sleep, and tolls The grand ideas of the villages. The malady of the quotidian . . . Perhaps if summer ever came to rest And lengthened, deepened, comforted, caressed Through days like oceans in obsidian Horizons, full of night's midsummer blaze; Perhaps, if winter once could penetrate Through all its purples to the final slate, Persisting bleakly in an icy haze; One might in turn become less diffident, Out of such mildew plucking neater mould And spouting new orations of the cold. One might. One might. But time will not relent.
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