17 pages • 34 minutes read
Tracy K. SmithA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Though Smith doesn’t really touch on this theme until the end of the poem, most any poem about the universe is thematically concerned with the vastness of the cosmos. Smith presents the universe and all of time as a surreal musical composition with no known author, purpose, or true meaning. There simply exists titanic sounds and natural harmonies that drown out all life and render those who hear the music small and insignificant.
Smith makes an interesting move in the first stanza that sort of sets up this idea of the grand universe. She shifts from the universe’s first track to the power of the universe’s music without drawing attention to the shift: “High hat and snare, even / A few bars of sax the stratosphere will singe-out soon enough” (Lines 1-2). The second line contains the most blatant alliteration in the poem, and it also features the only instance of inaccurate syntax. The movement from “sax” to “the stratosphere” is a run-on sentence, and it sticks out in a poem that is otherwise so governed by grammatical rules. The movement here can imply many things, but its placement in the first stanza and the attention Smith draws to it with heavy alliteration suggests the image has a unique kind of power.
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