A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg Introduction: In A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg the Speaker , possibly G...
A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg
Introduction:
In A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg the Speaker, possibly Ginsberg, is speaking directly to American poet Walt Whitman, who died in 1892, but who inspired many poets generations after his death.
Ginsberg, a Whitman devotee, is no exception. The speaker tells Whitman that he thought of him while walking under the full moon, and the speaker wanders into a supermarket, hungry and tired. The speaker then describes the people he encounters there, claiming to have seen Whitman in the aisles, poking at the different assortments of food. The speaker ends the poem, wondering if he and Whitman will walk around and dream of the past and of “the lost America.”
Theme of the Story:
A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg explores the themes of imagination, illusion, and reality. In the last stanza, the poet uses the theme of cultural consciousness. Allen Ginsberg uses his poetic imagination to invoke the spirits of Walt Whitman and Garcia Lorca in the poem. He talks with them, even walks side by side in the supermarket. His imaginary world is so vibrant that he never loses touch with reality while describing his night at the supermarket.
The poet uses the theme of illusion and reality in a manner that the poetic thoughts seem real to the readers. He jumps out of his illusory world to present the realistic scenes of the supermarket. Then again, he enters the illusion and connects the reality in the poem. Last but not the least, the theme of cultural consciousness is present in these lines, “Will we stroll dreaming of the lost America of love past blue automobiles in driveways, home/ to our silent cottage?
Symbolism:
A Supermarket in California by Allen Ginsberg is full of Symbolism and imaginery. The symbolic use of words like “hungry fatigue”, “neon fruit supermarket” and “solitary fancy” makes this poem interesting. Each word connects either the poet’s past or Whitman’s life. The name of the fruits mentioned in the poem also acts like symbols of something else. There is no explicit reference to any of them but a reader has to be aware while reading the poem.
Imaginism is the essence of modernity. The modern poets don’t make things explicit with exaggeration, they provide a picture and leave everything on readers. The poet uses the image of the supermarket to invoke a sense of din and bustle of the modern world. Then comes the fruits with their fruity colors. The poet even gives hints to picture Walt Whitman’s image in a specific manner. He refers to old Whitman in the poem. Ginsberg uses light and darkness to create a mysterious mood. The description of the poet walking with Whitman in the third stanza is also clear in these lines, “Will we walk all night through solitary streets? The trees add shade to shade, lights out in the/ houses, we’ll both be lonely.”
Stanza 1 (Lines 1-4)
As stated earlier, Ginsberg utilizes apostrophe, which is the device used when a poet speaks directly to a person who is not actually there. In this case, Ginsberg is speaking to Walt Whitman, who by the time Ginsberg wrote A Supermarket in California, had been dead for many years. Many consider Whitman to be one of Ginsberg’s inspirations and muses, so it is no surprise that the poet conjures up one of his idols.
He writes, “What thoughts I have of you tonight, Walt Whitman, for I walked down the streets under the trees with a headache self-conscious looking at the full moon.” In the next line, the speaker continues to talk to Whitman, telling him that in his “hungry fatigue,” he entered a supermarket to shop not for food, but images. In the next lines, it does seem that the speaker is shopping for the sights that he sees, not for food.
He calls the supermarket a “neon fruit supermarket,” which inspires images of bright lights and catchy products in his reader. He says he entered the store “dreaming of your enumerations!” An enumeration is a list of sorts, and Whitman is known for utilizing lists in his poetry. Ginsberg probably also intended to use the word since most people create shopping lists before going grocery shopping. Instead of consulting a food list, he is instead of checking the works of his favorite poet.
Lines 5-7:
The second half of the first stanza details images of the objects and people that surround the speaker in the supermarket. There is a flurry of activity occurring here, which is a sharp contrast to the beginning of the poem when the speaker seems almost lonely as he walks outside thinking of Whitman and looking up at the full moon.
Here, there are peaches and penumbras, which are dark spots in astronomy but could be the dark spots the speaker sees on the fruit. There are also families shopping together—the husbands are in the aisles while the wives are in the avocados and the babies are in the tomatoes. The speaker also speaks to another dead poet, Garcia Lorca, who is a Spanish poet who was executed at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. Curiously, Ginsberg uses so many exclamation points here, an uncommon punctuation mark in poetry. Perhaps he utilizes it to convey the hustle and bustle that is occurring inside the grocery store.
Stanza 2:
In the second stanza, the speaker claims to have seen Whitman, himself, “poking among the meats in the refrigerator and eyeing the grocery boys.” It is no secret that Whitman was homosexual, and Ginsberg makes a note of this in the line. On a side note, both Ginsberg and Garcia Lorca were also gay, which is perhaps why Ginsberg makes mention of the other poets in this work.
In the second half of the second stanza, the speaker admits to following Whitman around the store. The dead poet can be heard asking all sorts of questions, the last being "Are you my Angel?" It is almost as though Whitman is looking for salvation of sorts, someone to save him from this, particularly miserable existence. The speaker and his muse continue around the store, tasting and handling all sorts of food, yet never come across a single cashier. The speaker also admits to being “followed in my imagination by the store detective.”
Stanza 3:
It is here that the speaker is setting up a division between himself and other Americans. He writes, “Will we stroll dreaming of the lost America of love past blue automobiles in driveways, home to our silent cottage?” It seems as though the speaker is dreaming of when America was different from what it currently is: it was simpler and less obsessed with possessions. The speaker and Whitman are of that other America, not the current one, and their isolation and differentness are palpable in this final stanza.
He then asks Whitman, to whom he refers as a “lonely old courage-teacher” what America was like before “Charon quit poling his ferry and you got out on a smoking bank and stood watching the boat disappear on the black waters of Lethe?” Ginsberg references two different myths in these lines. Charon is the ferryman who leads the dead across the river Styx and into Hades, the underworld. The Lethe, however, is a different, more sinister river. Those who drink the water from this river will forget everything.
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