"Inebriate of Air- am I-
And Debauchee of Dew-
Reeling- thro endless summer days-
From inns of Molten Blue" (5-9).
In "I taste a liquor never brewed" by Emily Dickinson, the speaker seems to contrast the rural definition of drunkenness with the more common urban definition through an extended metaphor. If you asked anyone on the streets of down town Indianapolis, then they would say that drunkenness is directly related to how much alcohol one consumes, yet the speaker in the poem is talking about being drunk off air in the above excerpt. The speaker goes on to show that not only human's suffer from a summertime intoxication, but even the "bees and butterflies" (symbols for the different types of people) become addicted by summer. I do not actually understand the first stanza, but I think that it is an allusion (?) to Germany's stereotype of being big on drinking beer. Maybe it is hyperbolizing the amount of beer that Germany manufactures in an effort to show the magnitude and ease with which summer than cause an intoxication effect on the victim?
The last stanza goes back to the city definition of intoxication, but with a twist. In this scene, even the seraphs and saints are eager to learn where the town drunkard got tipsy. When the "tippler" is leaning against the sun, I think that represents a street light, but I really cannot figure that last line out.
I am started to understand Dickinson's style of poetry. All three of poems of hers that we have read have had a literal meaning that is very obvious and a deeper meaning that takes a little more digging, but is usually easy to figure out based on her very helpful titles.
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