Phases
Phases - meaning Summary
Salty Taste of Glory
The poem moves through linked images—an idle Paris square, a parrot, bugles at night—toward a meditation on glory and death. Stevens contrasts ordinary urban life with a sacrificial, almost mythic nobility evoked by Agamemnon and Hopkins. Nighttime music and surreal ornamentation convert mortality into a brief, triumphant taste that outshines London’s quotidian work and sorrow. The tone is elegiac and imagistic rather than literal or narrative.
Read Complete AnalysesI. There’s a little square in Paris, Waiting until we pass. They sit idly there, They sip the glass. There’s a cab-horse at the corner, There’s rain. The season grieves. It was silver once, And green with leaves. There’s a parrot in a window, Will see us on parade, Hear the loud drums roll— And serenade. II. This was the salty taste of glory, That it was not Like Agamemnon’s story. Only, an eyeball in the mud, And Hopkins, Flat and pale and gory! III. But the bugles, in the night, Were wings that bore To where our comfort was; Arabesques of candle beams, Winding Through our heavy dreams; Winds that blew Where the bending iris grew; Birds of intermitted bliss, Singing in the night’s abyss; Vines with yellow fruit, That fell Along the walls That bordered Hell. IV. Death’s nobility again Beautified the simplest men. Fallen Winkle felt the pride Of Agamemnon When he died. What could London’s Work and waste Give him— To that salty, sacrificial taste? What could London’s Sorrow bring— To that short, triumphant sting?
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