Images of Sandburg's Chicago...
Hog
Butcher for the World,
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler;
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders...
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![]() Men herding sheep off a Wisconsin Central railroad at stockyard, 1904 Chicago Daily News negative , DN-0003451, Courtesy of Chicago History Museum |
Distributing coal to the poor, 1903, Chicago Daily News negative DN-0000380
Courtesy of Chicago History Museum
Poetry Explication: "Chicago," by Carl Sandburg
| Source: "Chicago," in Poetry
for Students, Vol. 3, Gale Research, 1998. Source Database: Literature Resource Center Copyright (c) 2001 by Gale Group . All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. |
Overview:
Author: Carl (August) Sandburg (1878-1967) also known as: Carl
Sandburg,
Carl August Sandburg, Jack Phillips, Charles Sandburg, and
Charles A. Sandburg
Genre: poetry
Date: 1916
Introduction
Carl Sandburg's first major volume of poems, Chicago Poems,
published in 1916, offered the poem "Chicago," which
would go on to be one of the most famous poems that Sandburg
wrote. It is a classic example of his form and subject as it uses
free verse to reveal, explore, and celebrate the lives of common
people. The themes of hard work, suffering, and survival are
presented alongside those of laughter and youth with an almost
brutal honesty that Sandburg extracted from the everyday language
he listened to so closely throughout his life. The opening lines
set the poem apart from much of the poetry of the time with
"Hog Butcher of the World," and the list of epithets
that follow. Sandburg's poetry relied on themes of common, daily
life in the same way that the poems of Walt Whitman had. Using a
major urban landscape as a focus, the speaker goes on to mention
the harsh yet vibrant aspects of American progress. There is
violence and hunger in the city, and also the pride of a city so
alive. The poem then offers another list, descriptions of work
actions, and the line "Building, breaking, rebuilding"
which could be seen to represent the cyclical nature of
production and consumption in modern industrial life. The poem
finishes with a definite emphasis on the experience of laughter,
which offers another side of America often found in Sandburg's
poetry, that of a country worthy of joyous celebration and
livelihood in the face of hardship and progress.
Explication
Lines 1-5:
Sandburg begins the poem with a list of names or epithets for the
city that reflects its gritty, earthy, tough spirit. In the early
twentieth century Chicago was a center for the industries
Sandburg mentions. In these lines the speaker personifies the
city by likening it to a "Stormy, husky, brawling"
worker, with "Big Shoulders." This list also evokes the
human workers who actually perform the work associated with these
industries, thus establishing a link between the city and its
inhabitants, and beginning a process of merging human qualities
with the abstract "idea" of the city. In addition, by
being identified with the city, each person seems to represent a
combination of the individual and the universal. This is
consistent with Sandburg's desire to elevates the working people
to a level of great importance, and claims them to be essential
elements of larger social organizations.
Lines 6-8:
In these lines the speaker addresses a series of criticisms of
the city followed by concrete images from the speaker's own
experience which illustrate the criticisms. The city's wickedness
is demonstrated by its prostitutes that corrupt innocent boys,
its crookedness by killers that go unpunished, and its brutality
by the hunger seen in the faces of its women and children. Here
the speaker advances the personification of the city begun in the
first stanza by directly addressing it as "you" and
also by attributing the human qualities of wickedness,
crookedness, and brutality to it. At this point in the poem
Sandburg shifts to much longer lines and a more lyrical use of
language, partially to mimic the conversational language of the
direct address, but also as a way to increase the tempo and
energy of the lines.
Notice how Sandburg has used rhetorical strategies to help hold
lines 6-8 together. First, he has used parallelism by having each
set of two lines begin with a criticism, and then offer an image
to illustrate it. He also begins the first line of each set of
two (lines 6, 8, and 10) with almost the same phrase: "they
tell me. . ." This repetition of a phrase at the beginning
of lines is called anaphora, and as well as providing a certain
organization to a poem it can create a smoother, more musical
sound.
Line 9:
At this point, while not breaking the form of long lines, the
poems shifts from criticism of the city, to a defense. The
speaker of the poem, having admitted the presence of negative
elements, prepares to respond to "those who sneer," the
anonymous critics of the city.
Line 10:
Here the speaker continues the double reference to the
"you" of the poem, describing it as a "city and
lifted head," as a town and as a person. This is then
followed by a number of positive adjectives with which the
speaker attempts to balance or even override whatever negative
conditions may exist in America's modern cities. It is implied
that the negative conditions are the result of being alive, of
living, and also that the city and its people are "strong
and cunning" enough to survive and be proud.
Line 11:
Although struggling with work and toil, the speaker asserts that
Chicago, "tall and bold against the little soft
cities," is better than smaller, perhaps kinder cities. This
also inverts the comparison earlier in the stanza where the city
was "wicked" and "brutal" to its citizens.
Line 12:
As a last gesture before the poem moves back to a focused,
short-lined list, the speaker reinforces the resourcefulness and
survival abilities of the city in the face of hardship. This is
done with the use of simile, a poetic technique that compares two
unlike things to offer further insight or description. In the
example here Chicago is compared to a wild dog struggling for
survival, relying on his instincts to keep him alive.
Lines 13-17:
Here Sandburg shifts back to the list form which giving
particular emphasis to the words in these lines and also slowing
the pace of the poem. This list describes the city, drawing a
comparison to a laborer. As in the first stanza the description
of the city reflects all of the individuals who make up the city.
This list might also be taken as a way of seeing the circular
nature of modern, industrial America as it moves from
"building," to "breaking," and then back to
"rebuilding," as well as the cycle of each individual
as he or she works, encounters hardship, and carries on through
it to better times.
Lines 18-21:
With line 18 the poem turns toward the sentiment that will take
it to its end. This is a feeling of celebrationeven in the
fatigue and dirt of workfound in the universal symbol of
laughter. Again the lines are extended as the poem reinvokes the
youthful energy and joy found even "Under the terrible
burden of destiny." To emphasize his point, Sandburg uses
the repetition of the word "laughter" as it appears in
some form nine times from this line to the end of the poem. It is
this celebration of people's ability to overcome nature's
hardship, to laugh and enjoy life despite it, that made Sandburg
known as a poet of the people. Notice too how in line 21 the
speaker of the poem synthesizes the individual and the communal
by claiming that under the city's ribs lies "the heart of
the people." This could be seen as a unifying gesture in the
same way that the earlier list of laborers was melded into a
collective city.
Line 23:
In one final attempt to focus attention on celebration, and again
to alter the pace of the lines just before its conclusion,
Sandburg uses another one-word line and this time indents the
line further than those previous. This is a good example of how
free verse uses form to denote pacing, and give emphasis to
certain lines or words within the poem.
Line 23:
In the final line the poem continues with this concept of
laughter, enforcing the positive tone of the ending of the poem.
The laughter leads into a list of epithets almost exactly like
that at the beginning of the poem. This technique provides a
certain closure to the poem, ending back where it started. This
time, the speaker makes it clear the Chicago is "proud"
of what it is. Here also, the list of epithets are strung one
right after another rather than being broken up into shorter
lines as in the first stanza . One argument for this technique
might be to lead the reader to the poem's ending with a constant
rhythm and pace.