ATDTDA (17): Pynchon's Sandburg (473)

Mark Kohut markekohut at yahoo.com
Mon Sep 10 17:11:12 CDT 2007


I also hear "the roller of big cigars"......Stevens' poem

Tim Strzechowski <dedalus204 at comcast.net> wrote:  "Former bank officers whose sleeping heads were pillowed on satchels of U.S. currency, fifteen-year-old gold prospectors who inside were already old and crazy, with growing into it just a bothersome detail, girls 'in trouble' and boys who'd gotten them there, wives in love with clergymen, clergymen in love with clergymen, horse thieves and stackers of decks -- and every last absquatulator among them somebody's child, not so much gone as consciously committing absence, and folded that quick into family legend ... " (p. 473).


By using the phrase "stackers of decks," Pynchon tips his hand in terms of the influence for this catalog of rowdies: Carl Sandburg's "Chicago."

http://carl-sandburg.com/chicago.htm

Ultimately, for Sandburg laughter redeems the burly, hustling, hard-working belligerence that is Chicago (laughter itself being a metaphor here), whereas in the ATD passage no redemption if offered for the "sinful."



       
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