Theodore Roethke's poem “Song For the Squeeze Box" is a reflection on the speaker's past experiences with friends who drank heavily and engaged in reckless behavior. The poem suggests that these friends were not literary or intellectual figures like Ernest Hemingway or F. Scott Fitzgerald, but rather ordinary people who lived hard and enjoyed the pleasures of life. The first stanza describes the speaker's friends as tough, unpretentious men who did not complain or brag about their troubles. Instead, they faced their demons head-on and fought back against them. The second stanza describes how these men would get into fights with the Devil, but then sit down and drink together like nothing had happened. Overall, the poem celebrates the camaraderie and resilience of the speaker's friends, even in the face of difficult circumstances. It suggests that there is value in living life to the fullest and embracing the joys of the moment, even if it means taking risks and facing challenges along the way. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...COMPLAINT by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS THE CHILTERNS by RUPERT BROOKE THE LITTLE BEACH BIRD by RICHARD HENRY DANA (1787-1879) TO A CERTAIN CIVILIAN by WALT WHITMAN SIBLINGS OF A GRAYER SKY by NAVEED ALAM ANNIVERS: BAPTISMI by JOSEPH BEAUMONT AN INDIAN AT THE BURIAL PLACE OF HIS FATHERS by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT |