twelveoone
ground zero
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2004
- Posts
- 5,882
When I hear people talk about "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird." superimposed on it is a mental image of Charlie Manson preaching about the coming race war because the Beatles sent him a message on the White Album. It's there, "take these broken wings and learn to fly, blackbird fly...". Unfair, maybe. I have a great amount of trouble with Stevens, I can't sit down with him, I never understood why. What grand fault of my own do I harbour? I went looking, a quest for understanding...
Wally vs Willy
Dan Schneider makes a case for Stevens being greater than Shakespeare.OK Dan, I see it, yes, Willy wrote some loser sonnets and Wally was consistent, but Shakespeare had great some characters, and often he was funny.
This link for the Heath Online
Instructor's Guideseems to be cut off from from Houghton Mifflin's site, but has some interesting entries, that I hope some may be of use to somebody.
Stevens Here:
Contributing Editor: Linda W. Wagner-Martin writes: Beginning with the poems by Stevens might make reading T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, and William Carlos Williams much easier...so why do I, who like Eliot, WCW and at least respect Frost (snowy old bastard), have so much trouble with Stevens and can not take him seriously?
Wait, I see the characters, and Frost and Williams can be funny. Eliot can be downright uproarious. Ape necked Sweeney and whatnot.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor_of_Ice_Cream
...things that have their origin in the imagination or in the emotions very often take on a form that is ambiguous or uncertain. It is not possible to attach a single, rational meaning to such things without destroying the imaginative or emotional ambiguity or uncertainty that is inherent in them and that is why poets do not like to explain. That the meanings given by others are sometimes meanings not intended by the poet or that were never present in his mind does not impair them as meanings.
Well it seems I arrived full circle. Even though when I am serious this is the philosopy I take when I write, and yes I spent six weeks writing three lines so it they could be looked at five different ways...I laughed, to myself maybe...but I laughed.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_Stevens
Miller summarizes Stevens's position: "Though this dissolving of the self is in one way the end of everything, in another way it is the happy liberation. There are only two entities left now that the gods are dead: man and nature, subject and object. ( aha - the verb, maybe it was the lack of the verb, the adverb, I thought) Nature is the physical world, visible, audible, tangible, present to all the senses, and man is consciousness, the nothing which receives nature and transforms it into something unreal...
Sounds a little like Camus, who cometh from Nietzsche (both of whom had their comedic moments).
One should not invite another into looking into the abyss, without a little comedic relief - the laugh of the damned - and Wally just never struck me as funny.
Ah me, I'm damned, at least around here, with my failure to understand.
Wally vs Willy
Dan Schneider makes a case for Stevens being greater than Shakespeare.OK Dan, I see it, yes, Willy wrote some loser sonnets and Wally was consistent, but Shakespeare had great some characters, and often he was funny.
This link for the Heath Online
Instructor's Guideseems to be cut off from from Houghton Mifflin's site, but has some interesting entries, that I hope some may be of use to somebody.
Stevens Here:
Contributing Editor: Linda W. Wagner-Martin writes: Beginning with the poems by Stevens might make reading T. S. Eliot, Robert Frost, and William Carlos Williams much easier...so why do I, who like Eliot, WCW and at least respect Frost (snowy old bastard), have so much trouble with Stevens and can not take him seriously?
Wait, I see the characters, and Frost and Williams can be funny. Eliot can be downright uproarious. Ape necked Sweeney and whatnot.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor_of_Ice_Cream
...things that have their origin in the imagination or in the emotions very often take on a form that is ambiguous or uncertain. It is not possible to attach a single, rational meaning to such things without destroying the imaginative or emotional ambiguity or uncertainty that is inherent in them and that is why poets do not like to explain. That the meanings given by others are sometimes meanings not intended by the poet or that were never present in his mind does not impair them as meanings.
Well it seems I arrived full circle. Even though when I am serious this is the philosopy I take when I write, and yes I spent six weeks writing three lines so it they could be looked at five different ways...I laughed, to myself maybe...but I laughed.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_Stevens
Miller summarizes Stevens's position: "Though this dissolving of the self is in one way the end of everything, in another way it is the happy liberation. There are only two entities left now that the gods are dead: man and nature, subject and object. ( aha - the verb, maybe it was the lack of the verb, the adverb, I thought) Nature is the physical world, visible, audible, tangible, present to all the senses, and man is consciousness, the nothing which receives nature and transforms it into something unreal...
Sounds a little like Camus, who cometh from Nietzsche (both of whom had their comedic moments).
One should not invite another into looking into the abyss, without a little comedic relief - the laugh of the damned - and Wally just never struck me as funny.
Ah me, I'm damned, at least around here, with my failure to understand.