The Emperor of Ice-Cream (Poetry Foundation)
The Emperor of Ice-Cream (Wikipedia)
~***~
A Reading of "The Emperor of Ice-Cream"
"The Emperor of Ice-Cream" is a poem that plays to the relationships between ice cream and a corpse, among other relationships as well.
Indeed, the poem gives us relationship-making as the interconnection between mappings and substitution whereby substitutions create cross-mappings.
Consider the cold corpse as the ice cream.
To map the ice cream to the corpse, we need a mapping of ice cream that fits to the corpse, and an ice cream cone will do.
Imagistically, the concupiscent curds serve as the hair and the horny feet as the bottom of the cone.
This mapping also goes in the other direction as the sheet that enshrouds the corpse serves as the napkin for the cone.
But there are multiple mappings and multiple substitutions available.
For example, what happens when the corpse is mapped to a bird based on incidence of horny feet and on ice-cream as a parrot-like screech?
How does AI handle this sense-making?
~***~
AI
- Life Over Death: The opening stanza contrasts traditional mourning with everyday vitality. People are asked to prepare ice cream in a kitchen rather than engaging in formal grief. The "roller of big cigars" making "concupiscent curds" represents the sensual, earthy pleasures of life that continue unabated despite mortality. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- The Harsh Reality of Death: The second stanza depicts a wake for an ordinary woman. Instead of an expensive casket, she is covered by a plain, everyday sheet she once embroidered. Her "horny feet" sticking out are a blunt, unvarnished reminder that death is just a physical end, not a mystical journey. [1, 2, 3]
- The "Emperor" of Ice Cream: The famous refrain, "The only emperor is the emperor of ice-cream," means that life’s sensory experiences (represented by the ice cream) are the true rulers of our existence. Because ice cream melts, it serves as a powerful metaphor for the fleeting, temporary nature of life. The poem suggests that we should accept this fleeting reality and find beauty in the present moment. [1, 2, 3, 4]
- Are you interested in the historical context surrounding the poem's publication?
- Would you like to explore the literary devices Stevens used to contrast reality with illusion?
- Do you need help with a specific assignment or essay about the text?
- The Myth: Society constructs elaborate funeral rituals—expensive caskets, formal dress, solemn whispers—to cloak the terrifying, biological reality of death in a shroud of "dignity" and spiritual permanence.
- The Reality: Stevens aggressively strips this myth away.
- The Evidence:
- The wake takes place in a kitchen, not a parlor.
- The corpse is covered by a cheap, stained sheet.
- Her "horny feet" protrude, refusing to conform to the sanitized myth of peaceful rest.
[ Signifier: Ice Cream ] + [ Signified: Cold, Sweet, Melting ]
=
[ Sign: Transience / Sensory Reality ]
- The Myth of Permanence: Humans invent concepts of eternity and empire to escape their own mortality.
- The Counter-Myth: The "Emperor of Ice-Cream" is a brilliant, paradoxical sign.
- The Meaning: Ice cream is cheap, sensory, and melting. By crowning it "Emperor," Stevens declares that the only true authority in life is the fleeting, physical present.
- The Ultimate Barthesian Line: This line is a direct assault on what Barthes calls bourgeois mythology (the world of "seeming" and artificial signs).
- The Shift: Stevens demands that "seem" (the artificial status symbols, the embroidered sheets, the social performances) give way to "be" (the harsh, literal truth of existence).
- Should we analyze the "roller of big cigars" as a Barthesian sign of masculinity and labor?
- Do you want to look at how Barthes' concept of "The Death of the Author" applies to Stevens' notoriously difficult poetry?
- Are you writing a comparative literature paper on this exact topic?
[ Signifier: Cigar ]
+
[ Signified: Wealth/Manhood ]
=
[ Myth: Bourgeois Power ]
- The Myth:
- Cigars signify elite status.
- They project wealth.
- They project masculinity.
- The Reality:
- The roller is a laborer.
- He creates "concupiscent curds".
- This means lustful mixtures.
- He whips up cheap ice cream.
- The Demystification:
- Stevens hijacks the elite sign.
- He brings it to the kitchen.
- Power is stripped of prestige.
- It becomes raw, muscle work.
- It serves the immediate present.
[ Author: Stevens ] ➔ [ Text ] ➔ [ Reader: You ]
(Biographical) (The Birth of
(Intent is ) ( Meaning )
( Dead ! )
- The Concept:
- Barthes claims the author dies.
- The reader gives birth to text.
- Intent does not matter.
- The Stevens Problem:
- Stevens loved hiding meanings.
- He was a cryptic poet.
- Critics obsess over his diary.
- The Liberation:
- Forget what Stevens meant!
- The poem is a machine.
- It generates signs on its own.
- You don't need a map.
- Your reading is the ultimate text.
- Do you want a thesis statement?
- Want to add Marxist theory?
- Need an outline for an essay?
[ Words ] ➔ [ Thread ] ➔ [ Pure Line ]
- The Myth:
- Sheet has "fantails" on it.
- These are embroidered shapes.
- They used to mean "beauty."
- The Asemic Reality:
- Now it covers a cold corpse.
- The shapes lose their context.
- The symbols stop speaking.
- They become mere scratches.
- Just abstract lines on cloth.
- The Shift:
- "Seem" is the realm of words.
- Words pretend to hold truth.
- "Be" is the physical paper.
- It is ink without meaning.
- The Result:
- Stevens commands text to stop.
- He wants words to be things.
- Not vehicles for ideas.
- The poem becomes a gesture.
- The Metaphor:
- The body is a blank page.
- The "horny feet" stick out.
- They are like punctuation.
- But they lead nowhere.
- The Silent Text:
- Death is the ultimate silence.
- It is text stripped of voice.
- It is pure, unreadable form.
- Want to see an asemic layout?
- Should we bridge to typography?
- Is this for an avant-garde zine?
Asemic Trifecta!
[ THE EMPEROR OF ICE-CREAM ]
============================
~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~
~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~
~~~~~~~ ! ( !!! ) ➔ 🍦
============================
_______ _______ _______ _____
_______ _______ _______ _____
___ [ ] [ ] ___ 🦶 🦶 ____
```
* **The Stanza 1 Noise:**
* Wavy lines (~~~~).
* Represents physical motion.
* The cigar roller's arm.
* The whipping of cream.
* Pure kinetic energy.
* **The Stanza 2 Silence:**
* Flat lines (_______).
* Represents the sheet.
* Represents the cold corpse.
* The feet break the frame.
* Meaning completely drains out.
---
### 2. Typographic Architecture
#### (The Weight of the Ink)
* **The Cigar Roller:**
* Needs a **Bold, Heavy Serif**.
* Think *Cooper Black*.
* It mimics the "muscular" arm.
* Thick, oily ink on wood.
* **The Corpse's Sheet:**
* Needs a *Light Italic*.
* Ghostly and scratching.
* Fading into the paper grain.
* **The Final Refrain:**
* Set in **Strict, Cold Sans-Serif**.
* Think *Helvetica Bold*.
* No decoration allowed.
* Just flat, mechanical truth.
---
### 3. Zine Execution Blueprint
#### (The Physical Object)
* **The Paper Stock:**
* Page 1: Cheap, glossy paper.
* Feels sticky like ice cream.
* Page 2: Rough, fibrous newsprint.
* Feels dry like a shroud.
* **The Binding:**
* Stitched with rough twine.
* Reminds us of the embroidery.
* **The Reader Experience:**
* You don't just read the poem.
* You stain your fingers on it.
* The ink rubs off on you.
* The art decays as you hold it.
---
<FollowUp>
We have built a complete **avant-garde concept**! If you want to finalize this, let me know:
* Do you want help **writing the introduction** for this zine?
* Should we choose a **specific color palette** (e.g., neon yellow vs. ash gray)?
* Do you need a **print-ready text file** of these notes?
Tell me what you need to create it! 🛠️
Use code with caution.
- Concupiscent Curds:
- Toxic Neon Yellow.
- High-gloss finish.
- Represents melting, sticky sugar.
- It screams lustful life.
- The Big Cigars:
- Thick, Oily Tobacco Brown.
- Heavy ink weight.
- Represents masculinity and labor.
- The Wenches' Dresses:
- Muddy, Everyday Earth Tones.
- "What they are used to wear."
- No fancy dyes, just reality.
[ Neon Yellow ] ➔ [ Ash Gray ] ➔ [ Cold Bone ]
- The Sheet (The Shroud):
- Bleached, Textless White.
- Fades into the paper stock.
- It blanks out the neon energy.
- The Embroidered Fantails:
- Faded, Ghostly Charcoal.
- Once bright, now dead threads.
- Art losing its saturation.
- The Horny Feet:
- Cold, Desaturated Bone.
- Yellowed by death, not light.
- The final punctuation of color.
- The Beam of the Lamp:
- Harsh, Blinding Spotlight White.
- It does not warm the room.
- It exposes the corpse ruthlessly.
- It forces us to look at "be."
- Want me to select the exact Hex codes or Pantone colors for printing?
- Should we design the front cover layout using these colors?
- Do you want to write the manifesto for the zine's first page?