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Wallace Stevens

 
Who2 Biography: Wallace Stevens, Poet

  • Born: 2 October 1879
  • Birthplace: Reading, Pennsylvania
  • Died: 2 August 1955
  • Best Known As: The poet and insurance man who wrote "The Emperor of Ice Cream"

Now considered one of the great modernist poets, Wallace Stevens didn't receive many literary honors until late in life: He was over 70 when he won the National Book Award twice (1950 and 1954) and the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1955. His poems are as enigmatic as the poet, who spent four decades as an insurance executive while writing verse in his spare time. A graduate of New York Law School (1904), he worked in journalism and law, then spent most of his working life in Hartford, Connecticut, rising to vice president at the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company. His first collection of poems, Harmonium, was published in 1923 and included the poems "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" and "The Emperor of Ice Cream." Other major collections include The Man with the Blue Guitar & Other Poems (1937), Transport to Summer (1947) and Auroras to Autumn (1950).

Legend has it that Wallace Stevens once had a row with Ernest Hemingway, with Wallace coming out of it on the short end of the stick.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Wallace Stevens
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Wallace Stevens, 1952.
(click to enlarge)
Wallace Stevens, 1952. (credit: © Rollie McKenna)
(born Oct. 2, 1879, Reading, Pa., U.S. — died Aug. 2, 1955, Hartford, Conn.) U.S. poet. Stevens practiced law in New York City before joining an insurance firm in Hartford in 1916; he rose to vice president, a position he held until his death. His poems began appearing in literary magazines in 1914. In Harmonium (1923), his first and most verbally brilliant book, he introduced the theme that occupied his creative lifetime and unified his thought: the relationship between imagination and reality. His later poetry, in collections such as Ideas of Order (1936), The Man with the Blue Guitar (1937), and The Auroras of Autumn (1950), continued to explore this theme with greater depth and rigour. Not until his late years was he widely read or recognized as a major poet by more than a few; he received a Pulitzer Prize only with his Collected Poems in 1955. He is now often considered one of America's greatest 20th-century poets.

For more information on Wallace Stevens, visit Britannica.com.

Biography: Wallace Stevens
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American poet Wallace Stevens (1879-1955) was a virtuoso of language, a master of rhyme and verbal music, of gay and thoughtful rhythms, and of precise and exotic diction.

Wallace Stevens was a successful lawyer and businessman, as well as an important poet. But too much has been made of the combination of esthete and businessman in him. Poetry for him was an irresistible urge ("one writes poetry because one must"), whereas business success was largely a means to attain the independence and privacy he needed for his poetry. He was from the start a poet's poet, a brilliant craftsman, but general critical acclaim came slowly. His early verse shows the influence of the French symbolists - the romantic skepticism, irony, dandified wit, and self-deprecation of Charles Baudelaire, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Jules Laforgue. Stevens stood apart from groups, but he shared the imagists' devotion to concrete images and the general commitment of modernists to learning, discriminating diction, wit, and the merging of thought and feeling. Beneath the surface of his cosmopolitan verse, an American heart beats, acknowledging attachments to Pennsylvania, Connecticut, his adopted state, and Florida, a vacation state. In "The Comedian as the Letter C" he wrote that "his soil is man's intelligence." Stevens was an heir of Walt Whitman, who employed free forms, foreign phrases, and references to music. Stevens's approximately 400 published poems and his few essays and published talks are largely devoted to converting the diversity of reality, its "fragrances" and "stinks," to poetry's order and harmony.

Stevens was born on Oct. 2, 1879, in Reading, Pa. He was educated locally and from 1897 to 1900 at Harvard, where he absorbed something of Professor George Santayana's estheticism. After college he worked briefly as a New York Herald Tribune reporter and attended New York University Law School (1900-1903). He was admitted to the bar in 1904 and began practicing law in New York City. He married Elsie V. Kachel in 1909 and they had one daughter. All the while he was writing poetry, and as the poetic renascence in America and England gathered momentum, he began to associate with other poets, such as Alfred Kreymborg, William Carlos Williams, E. E. Cummings, and later Marianne Moore. In 1914, at the age of 35, this large, competent man, who spoke softly and seldom, submitted a group of poems to Poetry magazine, which printed four under the dandyish pseudonym of "Peter Parasol."

First Poems

In 1915 "Peter Quince at the Clavier" appeared, an important poem employing a variety of economical forms - three-line unrhymed stanzas, stanzas with irregular rhymes and different numbers of lines, and couplet stanzas. In it a man improvising at a clavier speaks or thinks of a beloved, and his imagination associates the sound of the music, his desire, and the ancient myth of Susanna and the elders. Particular beauties, he finds, are "momentary in the mind," but our hunger for beauty itself is passed on immortally in the blood.

The same year "Sunday Morning," one of Stevens's most celebrated poems, appeared. The poem is skeptical, but regretfully so. A complacent lady in a peignoir, having coffee and oranges in a sunny room, finds it possible to put off "the dark/ Encroachment of that old catastrophe," Christ's martyrdom. She suspects that the "comforts of the sun" are "all of paradise that we shall know," though she still feels "The need of some imperishable bliss." In a naturalistic cosmos, on the "wide water" of history, "unsponsored, free," she can unite herself to the passing delights of her tasteful room and the world outside.

In 1916 Stevens joined the legal department of the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Insurance Company in Hartford, Conn., but he returned to New York occasionally to see literary friends. He published two short plays, "Three Travelers Watch the Sunrise" (1916) and "Carlos among the Candles" (1917), both embodying the influence of symbolist theory and Japanese No plays. In 1919 Stevens enjoyed the first of the Florida vacations that occasioned a number of poems. Publishing regularly in little magazines, he had put approximately 100 poems into print when, at the age of 44, he published his first volume of verse, Harmonium (1923).

Harmonium

Most notices of Harmonium were unfavorable. The book demonstrated, nevertheless, that Stevens had perfected his use of Gallicisms, rare words, and "gaudy" language; of unusual titles and color symbols; and of short imagistic lyrics and long meditative poems, usually about poetry. The title and exuberant musical effects of "Bantams in Pine-woods," beginning "Chieftain Iffucan of Azcan in caftan/ Of tan with henna hackles, halt!" illustrate two of these characteristics. The poem contrasts bantams absorbed in concrete particularities with the inflated crowing of a "universal cock." "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird," "Le Monocle de Mon Oncle," "To the One of Fictive Music," and "The Emperor of Ice Cream" all became familiar pieces.

The character of Crispin in the long and difficult "The Comedian as the Letter C" is, up to 1923, Stevens's most effective representation of the artist. A performer-transformer in quest of deep realities, he is both the earth's highest creature and a limited clown subject to chance and change. Crispin's far, dreamlike voyages ultimately return him to his home continent and to the world within himself. Some critics look upon this thoughtful poem with its unusual vocabulary as a bridge between Stevens's early inclination toward virtuoso performances and a final concentration on the penetration of reality.

Stevens's poetic activity fell off after Harmonium. This has been attributed to efforts to advance his business career (he became a vice president of his insurance company in 1934) and to the fact that his Crispin-like quest took longer than he had expected. In 1930 his poems began to appear again, and he published a second edition of Harmonium (1931), its status as a classic of modern poetry now secure.

It was 1935 before Stevens issued a new volume, Ideas of Order. Here Stevens was still meditating on the poetic process but with a new elegiac note, a new uneasiness about a reality that included the Great Depression and forebodings of international violence. "Academic Discourse at Havana" notes that "a grand decadence settles down like cold." What is "the function of the poet" in such a cultural setting? Is it to speak an "epitaph" or "An infinite incantation of our selves/ In the grand decadence of the perished swans"? In "Ideas of Order at Key West" two men walk on the shore and discuss the sea (reality) and the "Blessed rage to order." The person in "Anglais Mort à Florence" finds that the pleasures of spring, Brahms's music, and the imaginative moon are waning with age and that he has become increasingly dependent on social order and memory.

The long title poem of The Man with the Blue Guitar (1937) represents an advance in Stevens's meditations on poetry. The guitarist is the poet, and the blue guitar his imagination. The guitarist says, "'Things as they are/ Are changed upon the blue guitar."' The author adds that in our secular world "Poetry/ Exceeding music must take the place/ Of empty heaven and its hymns." And later he declares that "Poetry is the subject of the poem,/From this the poem issues and/ To this returns…." Men are most alive in their imaginations, and the artist who imagines the materials of the world most truly and austerely into art is the most alive of men. In "Mystic Garden and Middling Beast" Stevens again affirms the responsible hedonism of such men who are "Happy rather than holy" and "whose heaven is in themselves."

Late Writings

At 60 Stevens began his unusually productive last period. Parts of a World (1942) is a collection of raw fragments of reality that were preliminaries to the final synthesizing meditations of later volumes. "Loneliness in Jersey City" presents an urban barrenness amusingly humanized by "Polacks" playing concertinas. Other poems are addressed to poetry and the fiction-making mind of the poet-hero, "the central man," "the glass man," who is as "responsive as a mirror with a voice."

Notes toward a Supreme Fiction (1942) is an extended poem of 30 lesser poems with prologue and epilogue embodying Stevens's mature ideas about poetry. Like much of his late verse, it is sparse, dense, and as a result at times obscure. To the ears of some critics it is also prosaic. Assessing the relationship of poetry and philosophy, imagination and reality, Stevens concludes that the true poet seeks the Supreme Fiction, the absolute but unattainable poem. He strives to enter into the changing fragments of this world and to discover by will or by chance order and unity. Though the results are only partial and unstable, he is compelled to go on seeking.

Esthétique du Mal (1944), another long poem, accepts the inevitable deprivation and suffering of man and the necessity for evil in order to define good. Poetry or language at its best, like faith in God, can help us convert these inevitabilities into joy: "Natives of poverty, children of malheur,/ The gaiety of language is our seigneur."

Stevens's new collection, Transport to Summer (1947), included Notes toward a Supreme Fiction and Esthétique du Mal. "Credences of Summer" is a lyrical celebration of the high point of reality (greenness) and of the year, "green's green apogee." "Dutch Graves" grew out of a visit to his old family home and cemetery in Tulpehocken, Pa. This poem and an essay published in 1948 both dwell on the decay of the religious vision, the fiction or myth that gave direction to his ancestors' lives.

Auroras of Autumn (1950) won the Bollingen Prize. The volume contains one of Steven's most penetrating statements on his poetic theory. In "An Ordinary Evening in New Haven" the meditator states, "'We seek/ Nothing beyond reality. Within it/ Everything … The search for reality is as momentous as/ The search for God,"' adding that a philosopher seeks "'an interior made exterior"' and a poet "'the same exterior made/ Interior…. "' The Necessary Angel: Essays in Reality and Imagination (1951) contains pithy and closely reasoned essays and lectures.

Stevens's Collected Poems (1954) received the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. At this time he refused a Harvard professorship, though he relished the idea of concentrating on poetry, but he feared that the appointment would force his retirement from business, since he had already worked several years beyond the statutory retirement age of 70. The decision was of little consequence, for he died on Aug. 2, 1955. The dedicated imaginer of the things of this world, like the subject of "A Child Asleep in Its Own Life" from his Opus Posthumous (1957), was asleep in his poems, the "sole emperor" of what he had regarded outwardly and known inwardly.

Further Reading

Stevens's daughter, Holly Stevens, selected and edited his Letters (1966). Stevens's Opus Posthumous was edited by Samuel F. Morse (1957). Morse's Wallace Stevens: Poetry as Life (1970) is comprehensive and combines biography with scholarly criticism of the work.

A general study is William Van O'Connor, The Shaping Spirit: A Study of Wallace Stevens (1950). Two introductions to Stevens's work are Frank Kermode, Wallace Stevens (1960), and Henry W. Wells, Introduction to Wallace Stevens (1964). More specialized studies include Robert Pack, Wallace Stevens: An Approach to His Poetry and Thought (1958); Daniel Fuchs, The Comic Spirit of Wallace Stevens (1963); John J. Enck, Wallace Stevens: Images and Judgments (1964); Joseph N. Riddel, The Clairvoyant Eye: The Poetry and Poetics of Wallace Stevens (1965); Herbert J. Stern, Wallace Stevens: Art of Uncertainty (1966); and Ronald Sukenick, Wallace Stevens, Musing the Obscure: Readings, an Interpretation, and a Guide to the Collected Poetry (1967). Essays on Stevens by various critics are in Ashley Brown and Robert S. Haller, eds., The Achievement of Wallace Stevens (1962), and Marie Boroff, ed., Wallace Stevens: A Collection of Critical Essays (1963).

Additional Sources

Bates, Milton J., Wallace Stevens: a mythology of self, Berkeley:University of California Press, 1985.

Brazeau, Peter, Parts of a world: Wallace Stevens remembered: an oral biography, San Francisco: North Point Press, 1985, 1983.

Richardson, Joan, Wallace Stevens, New York: Beech Tree Books, 1986-c1988.

Stevens, Holly, Souvenirs and prophecies: the young Wallace Stevens, New York: Knopf, 1977, 1976.

Wallace Stevens: a celebration, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1980.

US History Companion: Stevens, Wallace
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(1879-1955), poet, aesthetician, and insurance lawyer. Stevens's poetry has been the subject of more books of formalist, rhetorical, psychological, and poststructuralist criticism than that of any other modern American poet, though he published relatively little and mostly cryptic lyrical poetry. His first book, Harmonium (1923), appeared when he was forty-four. His major poems are collected in two volumes, Collected Poems (1954, which won the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award) and Opus Posthumous (1957); he also published a slim volume of essays on aesthetics, The Necessary Angel (1951).

His early short lyrics and several mature epic-like lyrics are characterized by stunning verbal mastery and what might be called a "unified field theory" of poetry, which was for him all of philosophy and experience, the ordinary mystified and magnified.

Stevens generally kept aloof from the political turbulence of the 1930s, although his unfortunate attraction to the romantic individualism of Benito Mussolini and his reactionary politics emerge in his personal correspondence. His measured stand on the artistic battles of the day appears in his stylized and precise poetic meditations about the act of writing poetry. Stevens's distance from the literary wars of his time is explained in part by his career as an insurance lawyer in Hartford, Connecticut. After winning many literary awards in three years at Harvard and a year as a paid journalist, he earned a law degree at New York University in 1903. He had many friends among the New York cognoscenti and was a serious modern art collector. In later years, in public readings and lectures, he spoke of the power of figurative language to transform the world.

Stevens's longer poetic meditations do not answer all the metaphysical and psychological questions they pose; rather, they engage the reader in speculations that echo the music and ideas encrypted in the Western tradition. Figurative complexity, semantic texture, and interpretive richness leave his poems open, ready to be finished by critics engaged in the quest for personal meaning. Such ambitious and ambiguous poems as Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction raise poetry to the status of a secular religion, a monistic philosophy. Nevertheless, Stevens wrote in an insistently American idiom, constructing a poetics based in national cultural ambitions and anxieties that had been earlier registered by Emerson and Whitman.

Stevens has been much emulated by recent poets for the rich sensuousness of his language, the haunting, festooned vocabulary with its double-register of suggestion fanning out, through endless metaphors, into philosophical speculation and psychological rumination. Many of Stevens's poems probe the source and extent of poetry, of the poet's mind, and the relationship of fragments of thought and vision to an elusive perfection beyond language.

Recently criticized for irrelevance to political and economic issues and for excluding nonwhite, nonmale, and other alleged minority interests, Stevens's powerful style nevertheless continues to attract disciples and detractors from across wide poetic and political spectra.

Bibliography:

Frank Doggett and Robert Buttel, eds., Wallace Stevens: A Celebration (1980).

Author:

Kathryne V. Lindberg

See also Literature.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Wallace Stevens
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Stevens, Wallace, 1879-1955, American poet, b. Reading, Pa., educated at Harvard and New York Law School. After 1916 he was associated with the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, and from 1934 until his death he served as its vice president. A master of exquisite verse, Stevens was specifically concerned with creating some shape of order in the "slovenly wilderness" of chaos. These ideas are expressed in his earliest volume, Harmonium (1923), to which belongs the best known of his poems, "Sunday Morning." His ideas are developed in the subsequent volumes Ideas of Order (1936); The Man with the Blue Guitar (1937); Parts of the World (1942); Transport to Summer (1947), which includes the long poem "Notes toward a Supreme Fiction," in which Stevens elaborates on the poet's role in creating the fictions necessary to transform and harmonize the world; The Auroras of Autumn (1950); The Necessary Angel, essays (1951); Collected Poems (1954; Pulitzer Prize); and Opus Posthumous (1957).

Bibliography

See his Collected Poetry and Prose (1997), ed. by F. Kermode and J. Richardson; letters, ed. by H. Stevens (1966); biographies by H. Stevens (1977) and J. Richardson (2 vol., 1986-88); studies by H. Vendler (1969) and H. Bloom (1980).

Works: Works by Wallace Stevens
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(1879-1955)

1923Harmonium. Stevens's first collection, one of the landmark volumes in American poetry, includes some of the poet's greatest works, including "Sunday Morning," "The Emperor of Ice Cream," "Anecdote of the Jar," "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird," "The Comedian as the Letter C," "Le Monocle de Mon Oncle," and "Peter Quince at the Clavier." Despite the astonishing intellectual and emotional range of the poetry, it is largely ignored or dismissed as the work of a dilettante. Stevens would subsequently write little until reissuing the collection, together with new work, in 1931. Born in Reading, Pennsylvania, Stevens was a lawyer who began in 1916 as an executive at the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, where he remained until his death.
1935Ideas of Order. Stevens describes his collection "as essentially a book of pure poetry. I believe that in any society the poet should be the exponent of the imagination of that society. Ideas of Order attempts to illustrate the role of the imagination in life." The volume includes one of Stevens's greatest works, "The Idea of Order in Key West," containing the poet's imaginative and artistic credo.
1936Owl's Clover. This series of blank-verse meditations on the nature of art and the role of the artist is chiefly significant for Stevens's aesthetic ideas and for providing elements that he would rework more successfully in The Man with the Blue Guitar (1937).
1937The Man with the Blue Guitar, and Other Poems. The poet's defense against charges that his work ignores social concerns takes the form of variations on the theme of the poet's transformative role of the imagination as the prime explicator of thought and feeling. As he writes in the title poem, "They said, 'You have a blue guitar, / You do not play things as they are.' / The man replied, 'Things as they are / Are changed upon the blue guitar.'" The work is crucial in Stevens's canon, articulating his concept of the poet's responsibility while renewing his faith in the power of his art.
1942Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction. Stevens's philosophical poetic sequence is a meditation on the nature of reality, the imagination, and poetry. Stevens also publishes a new collection, Parts of the World, which includes "The Poems of Our Climate," "The Well Dressed Man with a Beard," "Examination of the Hero in a Time of War," and others exploring Stevens's conception of poetry.
1947Transport to Summer. Stevens's collection includes the long poem "Esthetique du Mal," which asserts the utility of evil in service of the imagination. Critic Harold Bloom would declare that the poem is the poet's "major humanistic polemic" of the mid-1940s.
1950The Auroras of Autumn. Stevens's last major collection of new works includes poems such as "Large Red Man Reading," "The Ultimate Poem Is Abstract," and the long poem "An Ordinary Evening in New Haven," about which Stevens declared his intention "to get as close to the ordinary, the commonplace and the ugly as it is possible for a poet to get. It is not a question of grim reality but of plain reality. The object is of course to purge oneself of the false." The volume earns the National Book Award.
1951The Necessary Angel. Stevens's essay collection, drawn from his addresses, discusses the relationship between the imagination and reality and includes the poet's conception of "supreme fictions" and the transformative power of art.
1954The Collected Poems. Published to celebrate the poet's seventy-fifth birthday, this final collection published during Stevens's lifetime features twenty-five poems written since The Auroras of Autumn in a section titled "The Rock." They include some of his finest poems, such as "To an Old Philosopher in Rome," his homage to George Santayana, "St. Armorer's Church from the Outside," and "Prologues to What Is Possible."
1957Opus Posthumous. This posthumously published miscellany includes plays, essays, notebook entries, and some previously uncollected and unpublished poems, including "Adagia," a collection of aphorisms on poetry and the imagination.
1971The Palm at the End of the Mind. This selection of previously uncollected works includes the first complete version of Stevens's play, Bowl, Cat, and Broomstick.

Quotes By: Wallace Stevens
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Quotes:

"If some really acute observer made as much of egotism as Freud has made of sex, people would forget a good deal about sex and find the explanation for everything in egotism."

"Democritus plucked his eye out because he could not look at a woman without thinking of her as a woman. If he had read a few of our novels, he would have torn himself to pieces."

"To regard the imagination as metaphysics is to think of it as part of life, and to think of it as part of life is to realize the extent of artifice. We live in the mind."

"The imagination is man's power over nature."

"Intolerance respecting other people's religion is toleration itself in comparison with intolerance respecting other people's art."

"How has the human spirit ever survived the terrific literature with which it has had to contend?"

See more famous quotes by Wallace Stevens

Wikipedia: Wallace Stevens
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Wallace Stevens
Born October 2, 1879(1879-10-02)
Reading, Pennsylvania, United States
Died August 2, 1955 (aged 75)
Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Occupation Poet, Insurance Executive
Nationality American
Writing period 1914-1955
Literary movement Modernism
Notable work(s) Harmonium
Ideas of Order
The Man With the Blue Guitar
The Auroras of Autumn
Spouse(s) Elsie Viola Kachel (m. 1909-1955)
Children Holly Stevens (born 1924)
1936 Winged Liberty Head (Mercury) dime with the profile image of Stevens's wife, Elsie
Stevens' Hartford residence

Wallace Stevens (October 2, 1879August 2, 1955) was an American Modernist poet. He was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, educated at Harvard and then New York Law School, and spent most of his life working as a lawyer for an insurance company in Connecticut.

His best-known poems include "Anecdote of the Jar," "Disillusionment of Ten O'Clock", "The Emperor of Ice Cream," "The Idea of Order at Key West," "Sunday Morning," "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird," and "Tattoo."

Contents

Life and career

The son of a prosperous lawyer, Stevens attended Harvard as a non-degree special student, after which he moved to New York City and briefly worked as a journalist. He then attended New York Law School, graduating in 1903. On a trip back to Reading in 1904 Stevens met Elsie Viola Kachel (1886-1963, aka Elsie Moll), a young woman who had worked as a saleswoman, milliner, and stenographer.[1] After a long courtship, he married her in 1909 over the objections of his parents, who considered her lower-class. As The New York Times reported in an article in 2009, "Nobody from his family attended the wedding, and Stevens never again visited or spoke to his parents during his father’s lifetime".[1] A daughter, Holly, was born in 1924. She later edited her father's letters and a collection of his poems.[2]

In 1913, the Stevenses rented a New York City apartment from sculptor Adolph A. Weinman, who made a bust of Elsie. Her striking profile was later used on Weinman's 1916-1945 Mercury dime design and possibly for the head of the Walking Liberty Half Dollar.) In later years Elsie Stevens began to exhibit symptoms of mental illness and the marriage suffered as a result, but the Stevenses never divorced.[2]

After working for several New York law firms from 1904 to 1907, he was hired on January 13, 1908, as a lawyer for the American Bonding Company.[3] By 1914 he had become the vice-president of the New York office of the Equitable Surety Company of St. Louis, Missouri[4]. When this job was abolished as a result of mergers in 1916, he joined the home office of Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company[5] and left New York City to live in Hartford, where he would remain the rest of his life. By 1934, he had been named vice-president of the company.[6] After he won the Pulitzer Prize in 1955, he was offered a faculty position at Harvard but declined since it would have required him to give up his vice-presidency of The Hartford.[7]

From 1922 to 1940, Stevens made numerous visits to Key West, Florida, where he generally lodged at the Casa Marina, a hotel on the Atlantic Ocean. He first visited in January 1922, while on a business trip. "The place is a paradise," he wrote to Elsie, "midsummer weather, the sky brilliantly clear and intensely blue, the sea blue and green beyond what you have ever seen."[8] The influence of Key West upon Stevens's poetry is evident in many of the poems published in his first two collections, Harmonium and Ideas of Order.[9] In February 1935, Stevens encountered the poet Robert Frost at the Casa Marina. The two men argued, and Frost reported that Stevens had been drunk and acted inappropriately. The following year, Stevens allegedly assaulted Ernest Hemingway at a party at the Waddell Street home of a mutual acquaintance. Stevens broke his hand, apparently from hitting Hemingway's jaw, and was repeatedly knocked to the street by Hemingway. Stevens later apologized.[10] In 1940, Stevens made his final trip to Key West. Frost was at the Casa Marina again, and again the two men argued.[11]

In the 1930s and 1940s, he was welcomed as a member of the exclusive set centered on the artistic and literary devotees Barbara and Henry Church.

Stevens was baptized a Catholic in April 1955 by Fr. Arthur Hanley, chaplain of St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut, where Stevens spent his last days suffering from stomach cancer.[12] This purported deathbed conversion is disputed, particularly by Stevens's daughter, Holly. [13] After a brief release from the hospital, Stevens was readmitted and died on August 2, 1955, at the age of 75. He is buried in Hartford's Cedar Hill Cemetery.

Chuck Colson describes Stevens's conversion in his book The Good Life:

17. Despite the peace that Stevens found in the weeks before his death, his conversion made everyone around him nervous, even the clergy. Stevens asked Father Hanley, Sister Bernetta Quinn, and others who knew about his conversion to keep the matter from his family. He was afraid that his wife would come to the hospital and become hysterical. This reflected class prejudices. Converting to Catholicism for a Hartford patrician was like becoming "honorary" shanty Irish. That was simply not done. It could get you thrown out of the country club. Father Hanley's bishop also wanted the matter to be kept quiet because he didn't want the Protestant population of Hartford fearing that they would be pestered by priests when they came to St. Francis. The hospital had a non-proselytizing image to maintain.

Later, when Stevens's daughter learned of Father Hanley's claim, she flatly denied it could have happened. While this flew utterly in the face of the facts as attested to not only by Father Hanley but also by others who attended Stevens's baptism, Holly Stevens's denial of her father's conversion dissuaded many scholars from taking it seriously or discussing it at any length. Although Holly sold her father's papers to Pasadena's Huntington Library in the 1970s, she still controlled their use until her death in 1992. She gave scholars the impression that they would have limited access to quote from Stevens's papers if they paid too much attention to his conversion. For this reason, it seems, Peter Brazeau, who wrote an oral biography of Stevens and interviewed Father Hanley at length, used only a small portion of the material he developed on Stevens's conversion. Brazeau's taped interviews with Father Hanley are now part of the Huntington Library collection.

Poetry

Stevens is a rare example of a poet whose main output came at a fairly advanced age. His first major publication (four poems from a sequence entitled "Phases" in the November 1914 edition of Poetry Magazine)[14] was written at the age of thirty-five, although as an undergraduate at Harvard, Stevens had written poetry and exchanged sonnets with George Santayana, with whom he was close through much of his life. Many of his canonical works were written well after he turned fifty. According to the literary critic Harold Bloom, who called Stevens the "best and most representative" American poet of the time[15], no Western writer since Sophocles has had such a late flowering of artistic genius.

Stevens's first book of poetry, a volume of rococo inventiveness titled Harmonium, was published in 1923. He produced two more major books of poetry during the 1920s and 1930s and three more in the 1940s. He received the National Book Award in 1951[16] and 1955.[17]

Imagination and reality

Stevens, whose work was meditative and philosophical, is very much a poet of ideas.[15] “The poem must resist the intelligence / Almost successfully,”[18] he wrote. Concerning the relation between consciousness and the world, in Stevens's work "imagination" is not equivalent to consciousness nor is "reality" equivalent to the world as it exists outside our minds. Reality is the product of the imagination as it shapes the world. Because it is constantly changing as we attempt to find imaginatively satisfying ways to perceive the world, reality is an activity, not a static object. We approach reality with a piecemeal understanding, putting together parts of the world in an attempt to make it seem coherent. To make sense of the world is to construct a worldview through an active exercise of the imagination. This is no dry, philosophical activity, but a passionate engagement in finding order and meaning. Thus Stevens would write in The Idea of Order at Key West,

Oh! Blessed rage for order, pale Ramon,
The maker's rage to order words of the sea,
Words of the fragrant portals, dimly-starred,
And of ourselves and of our origins,
In ghostlier demarcations, keener sounds.[19]

In his book Opus Posthumous, Stevens writes, “After one has abandoned a belief in god, poetry is that essence which takes its place as life’s redemption." [20] But as the poet attempts to find a fiction to replace the lost gods, he immediately encounters a problem: a direct knowledge of reality is not possible.

Stevens suggests that we live in the tension between the shapes we take as the world acts upon us and the ideas of order that our imagination imposes upon the world. The world influences us in our most normal activities: "The dress of a woman of Lhassa, / In its place, / Is an invisible element of that place / Made visible."[21] Likewise, were we to place a jar on a hill in Tennessee, we would impose an order onto the landscape.

As Stevens says in his essay "Imagination as Value", “The truth seems to be that we live in concepts of the imagination before the reason has established them."[22] The imagination is the mechanism by which we unconsciously conceptualize the normal patterns of life, while reason is the way we consciously conceptualize these patterns.

The jar is a striking example of an order that does not feel a part of the land, and so seems to violate the existing order: “It did not give of bird or bush, / Like nothing else in Tennessee”.[23] Contrast this to the feeling one gets while looking over the water where boats are anchored in darkness, with lanterns hanging on poles, “Arranging, deepening, enchanting night”.[24] When the imagination is available to reality and does not try to force itself, reality becomes like a bar of sand onto which the imagination naturally washes and recedes.

The imagination can only conceive of a world for a moment—a particular time, place and culture—and so must continually revise its conception to align with the changing world. And as these worldviews come and go, each person is pulled in his or her normal life between the influence the world has on imagination and the influence imagination has on the way we view the world.

For this reason, the best we can hope for is a well-conceived fiction, satisfying for the moment, but sure to lapse into obsolescence as new imaginings wash over the world.

Supreme fiction

The imagination loses vitality as it ceases to adhere to what is real. When it adheres to the unreal and intensifies what is unreal, while its first effect may be extraordinary, that effect is the maximum effect that it will ever have.[25]

Throughout his poetic career, Stevens was concerned with the question of what to think about the world now that our old notions of religion no longer suffice. His solution might be summarized by the notion of a “Supreme Fiction.” In this example from the satirical "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman," Stevens plays with the notions of immediately accessible, but ultimately unsatisfying, notions of reality:

Poetry is the supreme Fiction, madame.
Take the moral law and make a nave of it
And from the nave build haunted heaven. Thus,
The conscience is converted into palms
Like windy citherns, hankering for hymns.
We agree in principle. That’s clear. But take
The opposing law and make a peristyle,
And from the peristyle project a masque
Beyond the planets. Thus, our bawdiness,
Unpurged by epitaph, indulged at last,
Is equally converted into palms,
Squiggling like saxophones. And palm for palm,
Madame, we are where we began.[26]

The saxophones squiggle because, as J. Hillis Miller says of Stevens in his book, Poets of Reality, the theme of universal fluctuation is a constant theme throughout Stevens poetry: "A great many of Stevens’ poems show an object or group of objects in aimless oscillation or circling movement.”[27] In the end, reality remains.

The supreme fiction is that conceptualization of reality that seems to resonate in its rightness, so much so that it seems to have captured, if only for a moment, something actual and real.

I am the angel of reality,
seen for a moment standing in the door.
...
I am the necessary angel of earth,
Since, in my sight, you see the earth again,
Cleared of its stiff and stubborn, man-locked set,
And, in my hearing, you hear its tragic drone
Rise liquidly in liquid lingerings,
Like watery words awash;
...
an apparition appareled in
Apparels of such lightest look that a turn
Of my shoulder and quickly, too quickly, I am gone?[28]

In one of his last poems, "Final Soliloquy of the Interior Paramour", Stevens describes the experience of an idea which satisfies the imagination, “This is, therefore, the intensest rendezvous. / It is in that thought that we collect ourselves, / Out of all the indifferences, into one thing.” This one thing is “a light, a power, the miraculous influence” wherein we can forget ourselves, sensing a comforting order, “A knowledge, that which arranged the rendezvous, / within its vital boundary, in the mind.”[29]

This knowledge necessarily exists within the mind, since it is an aspect of the imagination which can never attain a direct experience of reality.

We say God and the imagination are one . . .
How high that highest candle lights the dark.
Out of this same light, out of the central mind
We make a dwelling in the evening air,
In which being there together is enough.[29]

Stevens concludes that God is a human creation, but that feeling of rightness which for so long a time existed with the idea of God may be accessed again. This supreme fiction will be something equally central to our being, but contemporary to our lives, in a way that God can never again be. But with the right idea, we may again find the same sort of solace that we once found in divinity. "[Stevens] finds, too, a definite value in the complete contact with reality. Only, in fact, by this stark knowledge can he attain his own spiritual self that can resist the disintegrating forces of life . . . . Powerful force though the mind is . . . it cannot find the absolutes. Heaven lies about the seeing man in his sensuous apprehension of the world . . .; everything about him is part of the truth." [30]

. . . Poetry
Exceeding music must take the place
Of empty heaven and its hymns,
Ourselves in poetry must take their place[31]

In this way, Stevens’s poems adopt attitudes that are corollaries to those earlier spiritual longings that persist in the unconscious currents of the imagination. “The poem refreshes life so that we share, / For a moment, the first idea . . . It satisfies / Belief in an immaculate beginning / And sends us, winged by an unconscious will, / To an immaculate end."[32] The "first idea" is that essential reality that stands before all others, that essential truth; but since all knowledge is contingent on its time and place, that supreme fiction will surely be transitory. This is the necessary angel of subjective reality—a reality that must always be qualified—and as such, always misses the mark to some degree—always contains elements of unreality.

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. 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 . . . ."[33]

The role of poetry

Stevens often writes directly about poetry and its human function. The poet “tries by a peculiar speech to speak / The peculiar potency of the general, / To compound the imagination’s Latin with / The lingua franca et jocundissima.”[34] Moreover, “The whole race is a poet that writes down / The eccentric propositions of its fate.”[35] In a manner reminiscent of Wordsworth, Stevens saw the poet as one with heightened powers, but one who like all ordinary people continually creates and discards cognitive depictions of the world, not in solitude but in solidarity with other men and women.

These cognitive depictions find their outlet and their best and final form as words; and thus Stevens can say, "It is a world of words to the end of it, / In which nothing solid is its solid self."[36] In a poem called "Men Made out of Words," he says: "Life / Consists of propositions about life.”[35] Poetry is not about life, it is intimately a part of life. As Stevens wrote elsewhere, “The poem is the cry of its occasion, / Part of the res itself and not about it. / The poet speaks the poem as it is, // Not as it was.”[37] Modern poetry is “the poem of the mind in the act of finding / What will suffice.”[38]

It has to be living, to learn the speech of the place.
It has to face the men of the time and to meet
The women of the time. It has to think about war
And it has to find what will suffice. It has
To construct a new stage. It has to be on that stage,
And, like an insatiable actor, slowly and
With meditation, speak words that in the ear,
In the delicatest ear of the mind, repeat,
Exactly, that which it wants to hear, at the sound
Of which, an invisible audience listens,
Not to the play, but to itself, expressed
In an emotion as of two people, as of two
Emotions becoming one. [39]

His poem An Ordinary Evening in New Haven is a self-conscious digression about the creation of poetry.[15]

We keep coming back and coming back
To the real: to the hotel instead of the hymns
That fall upon it out of the wind. We seek
The poem of pure reality, untouched
By trope or deviation, straight to the word,
Straight to the transfixing object, to the object
At the exactest point at which it is itself,
Transfixing by being purely what it is
A view of New Haven, say, through the certain eye,
The eye made clear of uncertainty, with the sight
Of simple seeing, without reflection. We seek
Nothing beyond reality.

To create a stage is, for Stevens, a metaphor for the need of modern poetry to make its own new arena or realm in which it should be presented and in which it can be understood. Modern poetry is like "an insatiable actor because it continually must be in "the act of finding what will suffice." Stevens puns on the meaning of "act." In one sense, poetry is an act, learning the speech, meeting the women, facing the men, etc. In another sense, it is a dramatic performance meant to be heard by an audience, as it speaks words that echo in the mind of the listener. The audience is "invisible" in the sense that a poet rarely meets his or her readers. The typical reader picks up a book of poems and reads a poem or two, and the author never sees this happening. The reading of poetry is often a conversation between strangers. In this poem the two people are the actor that is the poem and the audience that is the listener, and their emotions should become "one." The poet should find the words that will speak to the delicatest ear of its modern listeners, echoing what it wants to hear but cannot articulate for itself. The poet, in the act of the poem, finds the sufficing words and for the audience and they allow the listeners to hear what is in their ear, their mind. As a result, the emotions of speaking and listening, of poet as actor and listeners as audience, should become one.

Reputation and influence

From the first, critics and fellow poets recognized Stevens's genius. Hart Crane wrote to a friend in 1919, after reading some of the poems that would make up Harmonium, "There is a man whose work makes most of the rest of us quail."[40] In the 1930s, the critic Yvor Winters criticized Stevens as a decadent hedonist but acknowledged his great talent. Beginning in the 1940s, critics such as Randall Jarrell spoke of Stevens as one of the major living American poets, even if they did so (as Jarrell did) with certain reservations about Stevens’s work. Stevens’s work became even better known after his death. Harold Bloom, Helen Vendler, and Frank Kermode are among the critics who have ensured Stevens’s position in the canon as a great poet. Many poets—James Merrill and Donald Justice most explicitly—have acknowledged Stevens as a major influence on their work, and his impact may also be seen in John Ashbery, Mark Strand, Jorie Graham, John Hollander, and others.

In 1977 David Hockney authored a book of etchings called "The Blue Guitar: Etchings By David Hockney Who Was Inspired By Wallace Stevens Who Was Inspired By Pablo Picasso". The book included the poetry of Wallace Stevens. The etchings were inspired by and were meant to represent the themes of Stevens's poem, "The Man With The Blue Guitar", which was inspired by a 1903 painting by Pablo Picasso titled "The Old Guitarist". It was published as a portfolio and as a book in spring 1997 by Petersburg Press.

Bibliography

Poetry

  • Harmonium (1923)
  • Ideas of Order (1936)
  • Owl's Clover (1936)
  • The Man with the Blue Guitar (1937)
  • Parts of a World (1942)
  • Transport to Summer (1947)
  • The Auroras of Autumn (1950)
  • Collected Poems (1954)
  • Opus Posthumous (1957)
  • The Palm at the End of the Mind (1972)
  • Collected Poetry and Prose (New York: The Library of America, 1997)
  • Selected Poems (John N. Serio, ed.) (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2009)

Prose

  • The Necessary Angel (essays) (1951)
  • Letters of Wallace James Stevens, edited by Holly Stevens (1966)
  • Secretaries of the Planet Mars: The Letters of Wallace Stevens & Jose Rodriguez Feo, edited by Beverly Coyle and Alan Filreis (1986)
  • Sur plusieurs beaux sujets: Wallace Stevens's Commonplace Book, edited by Milton J. Bates (1989)
  • The Contemplated Spouse: The Letter of Wallace Stevens to Elsie, edited by D.J. Bluont(2006)

References

  1. ^ The Contemplated Spouse: The Letters of Wallace Stevens to Elsie Kachel", edited by J. Donald Blount (The University of South Carolina Press, 2006)
  2. ^ Richardson, Joan. Wallace Stevens: The Later Years, 1923-1955, New York: Beech Tree Books, 1988, p. 22.
  3. ^ Richardson, Joan. Wallace Stevens: The Early Years, 1879-1923, New York: Beech Tree Books, 1986, p. 276.
  4. ^ Richardson, The Early Years, supra, p. 424.
  5. ^ Richardson, The Early Years, supra, p. 445
  6. ^ Richardson, The Later Years, supra, p. 87.
  7. ^ Richardson, The Later Years, supra, p. 423.
  8. ^ Letters of Wallace Stevens, selected and edited by Holly Stevens
  9. ^ The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens: "O Florida, Venereal Soil," "The Idea of Order at Key West," "Farewell to Florida"
  10. ^ Ernest Hemingway: Selected Letters 1917-1961, ed. Carlos Baker
  11. ^ Robert Frost: A Life, by Jay Parini
  12. ^ Maria J. Cirurgião, “Last Farewell and First Fruits: The Story of a Modern Poet.” Lay Witness (June 2000).
  13. ^ Peter Brazeau, Parts of a World: Wallace Stevens Remembered, New York, Random House, 1983, p. 295
  14. ^ Wallace Stevens (search results), Poetry Magazine.
  15. ^ a b c "Old New Haven", Juliet Lapidos, The Advocate, March 17, 2005
  16. ^ Richardson, The Later Years, supra, p. 378.
  17. ^ Richardson, The Later Years, supra, p. 420.
  18. ^ Stevens, Wallace. Collected Poetry and Prose, New York: Library of America, 1997 (Kermode, F., & Richardson, J., eds.), p. 306.
  19. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 106.
  20. ^ Stevens, Wallace. Opus Posthumous, London: Faber and Faber, 1990 (Milton J. Bates, ed.), p. 185.
  21. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 41.
  22. ^ Stevens, Wallace. The Necessary Angel: Essays on Reality and the Imagination, New York: Vintage, 1965, p. 154.
  23. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 61.
  24. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p.106
  25. ^ Stevens, The Necessary Angel, supra., p. 6.
  26. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 47.
  27. ^ Miller, J. Hillis. "Wallace Stevens." Poets of Reality: Six Twentieth-Century Writers, p. 226. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1966.
  28. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 423.
  29. ^ a b Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 444.
  30. ^ Southworth, James G. Some Modern American Poets, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1950, p. 92.
  31. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 136-37.
  32. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 330-31.
  33. ^ Miller, supra., p. 221
  34. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 343.
  35. ^ a b Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 310.
  36. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 301.
  37. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 404.
  38. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 218.
  39. ^ Stevens, Collected Poetry and Prose, supra, p. 218-19.
  40. ^ "Wallace Stevens: Biography and Recollections by Acquaintances," Modern American Poetry.

Further reading

  • Armstrong, Tim. "Player Piano: Poetry and Sonic Modernity" in Modernism/Modernity 14.1 (January 2007), 1-19.
  • Baird, James. The Dome and the Rock: Structure in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens (1968)
  • Bates, Milton J. Wallace Stevens: A Mythology of Self (1985)
  • Beckett, Lucy. Wallace Stevens (1974)
  • Beehler, Michael. T.S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and the Discourses of Difference (1987)
  • Benamou, Michel. Wallace Stevens and the Symbolist Imagination (1972)
  • Berger, Charles. Forms of Farewell: The Late Poetry of Wallace Stevens (1985)
  • Bevis, William W. Mind of Winter: Wallace Stevens, Meditation, and Literature (1988)
  • Blessing, Richard Allen. Wallace Stevens' "Whole Harmonium" (1970)
  • Bloom, Harold. Wallace Stevens: The Poems of Our Climate (1980)
  • Borroff, Marie, ed. Wallace Stevens: A Collection of Critical Essays (1963)
  • Brazeau, Peter. Parts of a World: Wallace Stevens Remembered (1983)
  • Brogan, Jacqueline V. The Violence Within/The Violence Without: Wallace Stevens and the Emergence of a Revolutionary Poetics (2003)
  • Critchley, Simon. Things Merely Are: Philosophy in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens (2005)
  • Doggett, Frank. Stevens' Poetry of Thought (1966)
  • Kermode, Frank. Wallace Stevens (1960)
  • Grey, Thomas. The Wallace Stevens Case: Law and the Practice of Poetry Harvard University Press (1991)
  • Hockney, David. The Blue Guitar (1977)
  • Leggett, B.J. Early Stevens: The Nietzschean Intertext (1992)
  • Leonard, J.S. & Wharton, C.E. The Fluent Mundo: Wallace Stevens and the Structure of Reality (1988)
  • McCann, Janet. Wallace Stevens Revisited: The Celestial Possible (1996)
  • Vendler, Helen. On Extended Wings: Wallace Stevens' Longer Poems Harvard University Press (1969)
  • Vendler, Helen. Wallace Stevens: Words Chosen out of Desire Harvard University Press (1986)

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