Main ideas
The sheer difficulty of
apprehending meaning from some of Stevens's poems turns many students away. Yet
Stevens is one of the most apt voices to speak about the perfection, and the
perfectibility, of the poem-- the supreme fiction in the writer's, and the
reader's, lives. If students can read Stevens's poems well, they will probably
be able to read anything in the text.
The elusiveness of meaning is
one key difficulty: Stevens's valiant attempts to avoid paraphrase, to lose
himself in brilliant language, to slide into repetition and assonantal patterns
without warning. His work demands complete concentration, and complete
sympathy, from his readers. Most students cannot give poetry either of these
tributes without some preparation.
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal
Issues
The value of poetry (and all
art); the accessibility of great moral, and mortal, themes through language;
the impenetrability of most human relationships; the evanescence of formalized
belief systems, including religion; the frustration of imperfection; and
others. Stevens often builds from historical and/or philosophical knowledge,
expecting "fact" to serve as counterpoint for his readers' more
imaginative exploits. But this technique is not meant to lead to easy or facile
explication. It is a way of contrasting the predictable and the truly valuable,
the imaginary.
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Stevens's intricate stanza and
rhyme patterns are a school of poetry in themselves, and each of his poems
should be studied as a crafted object. His work fits well with that of T. S.
Eliot, as does some of his aesthetic rationale: "Poetry is not
personal." "The real is only the base. But it is the base."
"In poetry, you must love the words, the ideas and the images and rhythms
with all your capacity to love anything at all." "Poetry must be
irrational." "The purpose of poetry is to make life complete in
itself." "Poetry increases the feeling for reality." "In
the absence of a belief in God, the mind turns to its own creations and
examines them, not alone from the aesthetic point of view, but for what they reveal,
for what they validate and invalidate."
Original Audience
Modernism was so specific a
mood and time that students must understand the modernists' rage for control of
craft, the emphasis on the formalism of the way an art object was formed, and
the importance craft held for all parts of the artist's life. Once those
conventions are described, and Stevens placed in this period, his own
distinctions from the group of modernists will be clearer. ("Not all
objects are equal. The vice of imagism was that it did not recognize
this." "A change of style is a change of subject." "In the
long run the truth does not matter.") Conscious of all the elements of
form, Stevens yet overlays his work with a heavily philosophical intention, and
the shelves of commentary on his poetry have been occasioned because that
commentary is, in many cases, useful.
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