In the first stanza, Roethke is making a connection with Yeats referencing Davies work as subtext. Each stanza uses a different subtext: Homer and Virgil are two others. As Stlukes mentioned, "Orchestra" is a corresponding work serving both as inspiration and connection. Sir John Davies' theme or themes are ...comparing the natural order with that of the cosmos, the microcosm of man vis the macrocosm of God and/or the universe... the overall harmonies of man and the natural world. Davies uses Homer, I think, as a lens to meditate and elaborate on these comparisons.


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It's also just another example of the way the poem dances around the themes of love, sex, physical movement, and the way they all relate to one another. What seems to be an amorous entanglement may in reality be a dance. In other places, what would seem to be merely movement takes on amorous overtones: the sun loves the earth, there are even hints that rhetoric can make words a bit "licentious"

