anyone lived in a pretty how town’
E. E. Cummings
Summary
‘anyone lived in a
pretty how town’ by E. E. Cummings is
a complex poem that depicts the life and death of “anyone” and “noone”.
In the first stanza of the poem, the speaker introduces a man named “anyone” who
lived in an ordinary town filled with the chiming of bells. He moved through
life honestly, always aware of everything he’d left undone, and happy to
celebrate the things he had accomplished. Despite his seemingly good nature,
noone in the two “both little and small” cared for “anyone” at all. They cared
only for themselves and continued to plant and harvest in that way.
The speaker goes on to
introduce “noone” a woman who lived in the same area and loved anyone. The
relationship was at first interesting for the children, but they soon forgot
about it despite the growing love noone had for anyone. Noone was well aware of
everything anyone was feeling. Anyone eventually died as did noone. The
townspeople who’d been concerned with their own lives, took the time to bury
them next to one another. The poem concludes with an emphasis on the cyclical
nature of life and the birth of the next generation of townspeople.
Themes
Cummings taps into
some very important themes in ‘anyone lived in a pretty how
town’. These include but are not limited to community, solitude, and
societal norms/conformity. Throughout the poem, he presents a critique of
the latter, the normal standards of life, and the desire and pressure to
conform. It is something that Cummings saw as an unfortunate part of
contemporary life. Unlike the townspeople, anyone and noone do not focus on
living their lives by a set, conventional pattern of failure and success.
Cumming’s townspeople know what’s expected of them and they do “their dance” in
order to make it happen.
Cummings uses repetition throughout the poem in order to
emphasize the cyclical, monotonous nature of the townspeople’s lives. Although
they are able to briefly take time away from the “schedules” to take note of
the relationship between noone and anyone, they are too “busy” to remain
interested for long. The same can be said for their burial.
Structure
and Form
‘anyone lived in a
pretty how town’ E. E. Cummings is a nine stanza poem that is made up
sets of four lines, known as quatrains.
These quatrains follow a loose rhyme scheme of AABB but there are several
examples in which the end rhymes are half-rhymes or slant rhymes rather than full rhymes.
For example, “same” and “rain” in stanza two.
Cummings chose to make
use of a vague metrical pattern as well. Each line as the same number of
stressed syllables (four) but where they fall varies. This is known as accentual verse.
Literary
Devices
Cummings makes use of
several literary devices in ‘anyone lived in a pretty how town’. These
include but are not limited to repetition, alliteration, imagery, and enjambment. The first of these, alliteration,
appears when the poet uses words with the same consonant sound at the beginning
of multiple words. For example, “didn’t he danced his did” in line four and
“snow” and “stir” in stanza four.
Enjambment is another popular formal device that is used when a poet cuts off a line of
text before the natural stopping point. For example, the transition between lines one and two of the
first stanza and line four of the first stanza and line one of the third
stanza. These are only two examples of the many that are scattered throughout
the poem. They help to control the speed at which a reader moves through the
text as well as create moments of suspense. In some cases, they can even benefit
the content of the poem.
Analysis,
Stanza by Stanza
Stanza
One
anyone lived in a
pretty how town
(…)
he sang his didn’t he
danced his did.
In the first stanza
of ‘anyone lived in a pretty how town’ the speaker begins by
making use of the line that later came to be used as the title. He describes a
man named “anyone” who “lived in a pretty how town”. The fact that Cummings
chose the representative name “anyone,” (uncapitalized) for this character is striking.
It is also confusing for someone who is just encountering the poem for the
first time.
He goes on to describe
how “anyone” “sang his didn’t”. This is confusing description is characteristic
of Cumming’s poetry. But, there is a meaning behind it. He is describing how
the man was well aware of everything he “didn’t” do or had yet to do. He
“danced his did,” meaning that he celebrated everything that he had
accomplished. This is placed against the seasons which continually move forward
and an abstract depiction of up and down movement and bells.
Stanza
Two
Women and men(both
little and small)
(…)
sun moon stars rain
In the second stanza,
the full rhyme of “small” and “all” adds to the
otherworldly, even nursery rhyme-esque feeling of the poem. The
speaker describes how the men and women of the town knew “anyone” but they
didn’t care for him. This wasn’t because of a particular hatred on their part
but because they were caught up in their work. They did the same thing day in
and say out.
They “sowed their
isn’t” and “reaped their same”. It’s clear from this depiction that their way
of life is not going to be described in a positive light. They all sowed their
seeds and “reaped” the same benefits from them. This is a metaphorical way of describing their
conformity. The last line of this stanza works the same way as the line about
the seasons in the first stanza. It helps to remind the reader that time is
passing and the world is turning.
Stanza
Three
children guessed(but
only a few
(…)
that noone loved him
more by more
The third stanza
brings in children. These children, for a time before they’re indoctrinated
into the world of the townspeople, notice “anyone” and the woman who loves him,
“noone”. They noticed for a time how much she loved him and how that love grew
bu then they grew up, the seasons went by, and they forgot.
Readers should take
note of the fact that Cummings is using enjambment in almost every line of the
poem.
Stanza
Four
when by now and tree
by leaf
(…)
anyone’s any was all
to her
In the fourth stanza
of ‘anyone lived in a pretty how town’ the speaker describes
how over time the love “noone” had for “anyone” grew and grew. He uses natural
images to depict this love and how she came to know him deeply. She shared in
his joy and his grief. His “any was all to her”. Their worlds were intertwined
entirely. The “snow” and “leaf” in this stanza is another marker of time.
Stanzas
Five and Six
someones married their
everyones
laughed their cryings
and did their dance
(…)
with up so floating
many bells down)
Back in the town, the
“someones married their everyones” and “did their dance” as they were supposed
to. These people followed a pattern set out for them that they are too scared
to deviate from. They “slept their dreams” and time moved on. The days past and
he uses the line “snow can begin to explain”. This suggests that old age is on
the way and with it, death. Death conveys to the world the way children care
briefly for others and then turn inward.
He follows this up
with the same confusing line from the start of the poem “with up so floating
many bells down”. This line can be interpreted in several different ways. The
bells might represent a celebration, such as marriage, or mourning, like death.
The “up” and “down” could refer to growth and
death, making it relate back to the image of time moving forward.
Stanza
Seven
one day anyone died i
guess
(…)
little by little and
was by was
Inevitably, “anyone”
died. The speaker uses the first person pronoun “i” in this stanza
followed up bu the word “guess” and if he too is as uncommitted to caring about
others as the townspeople are. “Noone,” his lover and partner, is the only one
to truly grieve for him. She died soon after and the “busy folk” of the town
quickly buried them “side by side”. No one took the time to think about the
couple. This is one of the interesting moments in the poem where it’s important
to read “noone” as a name and as a description of “no one” being there to
grieve. This adds another layer to the poem. Readers should also consider the
importance of the word “busy” in this stanza. Are the townspeople really busy?
What are they busy with and why is that more important than paying their
respects to a deceased couple?
Stanza
Eight
all by all and deep by
deep
(…)
wish by spirit and if
by yes.
The eighth stanza is
the second to last of this dark and complex narrative. Dirt falls, “all by all
and deep by deep” onto the coffins as the two are buried. They’re dead,
dreaming, and sleeping, as mentioned earlier on in the poem. The two have been
returned to the earth in the springtime (april).
The last line of the
poem is one of the most confusing in the entire piece. It reads: “wish by
spirit and if by yes”. Their wishes are gone to the grave, even the ones that
came from the depths of their “spirit”. The “ifs” and “yes’s” of wishes are
down there with them.
Stanza
Nine
Women and men(both
dong and ding)
(…)
sun moon stars rain
In the final stanza
of ‘anyone lived in a pretty how town’ the speaker compares
the men and women of the town to the “dong and ding” of the bell. This bell,
the same one that was referenced two other times in the poem, suggests that
these men and women are part of a larger metaphor representing life and death. With
the last lines, Cummings again uses repetition to hammer home the point that
conformity gets you nowhere. Before and after you there will be the “sun moon
stars rain”.