Obviously it's about how civilisations fall. The poem has a particular relevance today.
The mundane, petty matters that bring down empires have a particular poignancy right now. They are contrasted with those things that really continue to make the rockin' world go round.
The "imaginary friend" is the person the literary man writes for, his appreciative audience, like Salinger's remark "Do it for the fat lady."
http://doitforthefatlady.blogspot.com/2007/07/do-it-for-fat-lady-explained-do...
Cerebrotonic refers to somatotype, contrasting with mesomorphic (muscle-bound), and it means a thin, intellectual - like Auden, perhaps.
"Unimportant clerks" gamble away our life-savings.
And always present are lifeforms that can overgrow us and outbreed us very quickly.
DEEEP
yod98 3 months ago
I've always loved Auden. Thought this would be a sonnet from the first quatrain. Do the herds of reindeer refer to the movement of northern barbarian herders across Europe into Roman lands?
bigbear6161 8 months ago
Red Cloth Series: Ross McCague (In tribute to Auden)
alsonross 1 year ago
You should allow ratings: I'd give it five.
Aeschylus 2 years ago
Thank you for reminding me how great a poet Auden could be. (Couplet unintended!)
brychar66 3 years ago
Thanks, Spokenverse, and thanks for the Fat Lady link as well
AgingFishwife 3 years ago
Great work, I look forward to your videos every morning, thanks.
Temorablue 3 years ago