Analysis
Metaphor
Critics have noted an underlying tension in the poem between thought and feeling. Literary scholar Milton Cohen writes about how "since feeling is first" compares feeling with positive natural expressions like kisses and laughter while the order of thought is compared with death. Grammar is used as a metaphor to this end, forming the order which represents thought. This triumph of emotion over logic is a tenet of Romanticism and causes some scholars to consider him so. Other scholars have called Cummings a neo-Romantic instead, citing his deliberate use of illogic (as in the title of the collection, ''Is 5,'' which stems from the assertion that "two plus two is five"). Moments in this poem support the metaphor of grammar and thought. For instance, in the line "Wholly to be a fool", theForm and syntax
"since feeling is first" is composed of five stanzas, the last of which is only one line long. Of the five sections in the book, it is found in the fourth, which contains love poems. Despite a seeming condemnation of adhering to it, the poem has been noted for its subversion of syntax. Cummings plays with syntax, such as in the lines "Wholly to be a fool/while Spring is in the world/my blood approves", which is syntactically correct but is oddly ordered.Irony
A number of the points argued for in the poem exhibit a certain irony. Though the speaker seems to make a case in favor of feeling as opposed to thought, potentially negative words are associated with this theme, including "fool" ("wholly to be a fool") and the highly connotative "fate" ("kisses are a better fate"). Additionally, the speaker "swear by all flowers," although flowers will fade. Critics have also noted that the poem exhibits a high degree of craftsmanship and makes very specific syntactic decisions in spite of the apparent disdain for language and thought. Some have gone as far as to claim that this disdain is feigned and therefore creates a hyperbolic persona. Despite the seeming triumph of feeling, the final line of the poem is "And death i think is no parenthesis", rather than "And death i ''feel'' is no parenthesis", which adds to the irony of the piece.Text
since feeling is first who pays any attention to the syntax of things will never wholly kiss you; wholly to be a fool while Spring is in the world my blood approves, and kisses are a better fate than wisdom lady i swear by all flowers. Don’t cry – the best gesture of my brain is less than your eyelids’ flutter which says we are for each other; then laugh, leaning back in my arms for life’s not a paragraph And death i think is no parenthesis
Recording
In 1938, E. E. Cummings made a phonograph recording of several poems, including "since feeling is first", which were to be included in an upcoming collection called ''Collected Poems''. Despite this distribution, the book did not sell well in its time.References
{{E. E. Cummings Poetry by E. E. Cummings 1926 poems Modernist poems American poems