i sing of Olaf

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"i sing of Olaf" (sometimes referred to as "i sing of Olaf glad and big") is a poem by E.E. Cummings. It first appeared in Cummings' 1931 collection ViVa. It depicts the life of Olaf, a conscientious objector and pacifist during the First World War who is tortured by the United States Army but nonetheless "will not kiss your fucking flag", and subsequently dies in prison.

History[]

The poem is based on the true story of a "big blond conscientious objector who was reading Sir Thomas Browne",[1] whom Cummings briefly encountered while stationed at Camp Devens in 1918;[2] Susan Cheever noted that Cummings never learned the man's name, and only "vividly imagined his fate".[1]

Analysis[]

Critics have noted the similarity of the opening stanza to that of Virgil's Aeneid, underlining the contrast between Olaf (whose heroic values are based in peace) and Achilles (whose heroic values were based in war).[3][4] Gary Lane has observed that the poem's "laconic conclusion" prefigures W. H. Auden's "The Unknown Citizen",[3] and Macha Rosenthal stated that he "learned more about the abuse of power from 'i sing of Olaf' than [he] had imagined possible."[5]

Censorship[]

Although the poem's original publication contained the word "fucking", anthologies typically bowdlerized this to "f.ing";[6] similarly, Olaf's statement that "there is some shit i will not eat" is typically rendered as "there is some s. i will not eat".[7]

Homages[]

"i sing of Olaf" was the inspiration for Marco Stroppa's 2005 piece "I will not kiss your fucking flag".[8]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "E. E. Cummings, A Life", by Susan Cheever; page 64; published 2014 by Pantheon Books
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of American Poetry: The Twentieth Century, page 164-165, by Catherine Tramonta, edited by Eric L. Haralson; published 2014 by Routledge
  3. ^ a b "So Many Selves" (chapter 3) (p 38-41), I Am: A Study of E. E. Cummings' Poems, by Gary Lane; published 1976 by University Press of Kansas
  4. ^ CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF "i sing of Olaf glad and big", in "Bloom's Major Poets: E. E. Cummings", edited by Harold Bloom, published 2009 by Infobase Publishing
  5. ^ [https://www.jstor.org/stable/43914812 "e. e. c. (= élan et courage)", by M. L. Rosenthal; in Spring, the Journal of the E.E. Cummings Society; New Series, No. 3, Centennial Issue (October 1994), pp. 21-29 (9 pages)
  6. ^ A Frieze for a Temple of Love, by Edward Field, published 1998 by David R. Godine, Publisher
  7. ^ E. E. Cummings, a biography, by Christopher Sawyer-Lauçanno; published 2004 by Sourcebooks
  8. ^ Seen and Heard Festival Report: Wittener Tage fuer Neue Kammermusik, reviewed by John Warnaby, 2005; at MusicWeb International; retrieved September 2, 2018
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