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Thread: Wallace Stevens

  1. #271
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Wallace Stevens

    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose

    from Uncollected Poems

    ROMANCE FOR A DEMOISELLE LYING IN THE GRASS

    It is grass.
    It is monotonous.

    The monotony
    Is like your port which conceals
    All your characters
    And their desires.

    I might make many images of this
    And twang nobler notes
    Of larger sentiment.

    But I invoke the monotony of monotonies
    Free from images and change.

    Why should I savor love
    With tragedy or comedy?

    Clasp me,
    Delicatest machine.

    {1919-1920?}

  2. #272
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Wallace Stevens

    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose
    from Uncollected Poems

    THE SHAPE OF THE CORONER

    It was the morn
    And the palms were waved
    And the brass was played
    Then the coroner came
    In his limpid shoes.

    The palms were waved
    For the beau of illusions.
    The termagant fans
    Of his orange days
    Fell, famous and flat,
    And folded him round,

    Folded and fell
    And the brass grew cold
    And the coroner's hand
    Dismissed the band.

    It was the coroner
    Poured this elixir
    Into the ground,
    And a shabby man,
    An eye too sleek,
    And a biscuit cheek.

    And the coroner bent
    Over the palms.
    The elysium lay
    In a parlor of day.

    {1923}

  3. #273
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    Hey Virgil, I was having a hard time pulling a visual on those porters. Thanks.
    Let's hope we don't actually run into any.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  4. #274
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Wallace Stevens

    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose
    from Uncollected Poems

    LULU GAY

    Lulu sang of barbarians before the eunuchs
    Of gobs, who called her orchidean,
    Sniffed her and slapped heavy hands
    Upon her.
    She made the eunuchs ululate.
    She described for them
    The manners of the barbarians
    What they did with their thumbs.
    The eunuchs heard her
    With continual ululation.
    She described how the barbarians kissed her
    With their wide mouths
    And breaths as true
    As the gum of the gum-tree.
    "Olu" the eunuchs cried. "Ululalu"

    {1921}

  5. #275
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose
    from Uncollected Poems

    LULU GAY

    Lulu sang of barbarians before the eunuchs
    Of gobs, who called her orchidean,
    Sniffed her and slapped heavy hands
    Upon her.
    She made the eunuchs ululate.
    She described for them
    The manners of the barbarians
    What they did with their thumbs.
    The eunuchs heard her
    With continual ululation.
    She described how the barbarians kissed her
    With their wide mouths
    And breaths as true
    As the gum of the gum-tree.
    "Olu" the eunuchs cried. "Ululalu"

    {1921}
    That is great!! Pure Stevens humor. He could be so analytical and then be so down to earth. This is great. ")
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  6. #276
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    For Stevens, that has to be the most humorous piece yet.

  7. #277
    biting writer
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    To return way way back to the beginning of this thread, with the famous "Emperor", just as a technical matter, it is very difficult to read the first stanza and maintain your speaking poise:

    The muscular one, and bid him whip
    In kitchen cups concupiscent curds
    Tragi-comically a playful piece? Maybe, but Stevens seems to refuse the reader the ease of entering into the poetic narrative, without getting your tush jilted by potholes. "Concupiscent" is a lovely word, playful, slightly lewd, but I can guarantee you my editors today would put a bullet through my eyes for such alliteration.

    As practiced as I am, I could not perform this poem for an audience.

  8. #278
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    It's not "The Emporer of Ice Cream" ... is it? On your account JoZ, I'll return to Stevens less tacky work.

  9. #279
    biting writer
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    I don't know enough of Stevens to makes any judgments about tacky, though I'd love to know how he got that line through a copy editor .

    On my account, you will do nothing of the sort but to do what pleases you. I am just a bitter writer who frolics in the sandbox here.

  10. #280
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    Wallace Stevens

    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose

    from Parts of a World

    THE SEARCH FOR SOUND FREE FROM MOTION

    All afternoon the gramaphone
    Parl-parled the West -Indian weather.
    The zebra leaves, the sea
    And it all spoke together.

    The many-stanzaed sea, the leaves
    And it spoke all together.
    But you, you used the word,
    Your self its honor.

    All afternoon the gramaphoon,
    All afternoon the gramaphoon,
    The world as word,
    Parl-parled the West-Indian hurricane.
    {excerpt}

    {circa. 19442}

  11. #281
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jozanny View Post
    I don't know enough of Stevens to makes any judgments about tacky, though I'd love to know how he got that line through a copy editor .

    On my account, you will do nothing of the sort but to do what pleases you. I am just a bitter writer who frolics in the sandbox here.
    I haven't forgotten that I promised to send you some of my favorite Stevens poems Jozy. I'm planning on doing that tomorrow.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

  12. #282
    Quote Originally Posted by quasimodo1 View Post
    I do take exception to Nick's sophmoric remark; would love to have written something like that, especially with a war in the backround, as Freshman, Senior or PHD.
    I meant that it was sophomoric when compared to the stuff in Stevens' Collected Poems...not to the average Freshman to PhD creatuve writng student. Stevens obviously didn't think it was worth collecting, and he was right.

  13. #283
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    to Nick: I'll withdraw that bit of sarcasm. And he didn't publish it although the decisions about what Stevens got published sometimes was not his own. In this case, I think he demurred. q1

  14. #284
    Registered User quasimodo1's Avatar
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    footnote on "Phases" "...525.9...Sections II to V of this group were published in a special 'War Number' of POETRY, November 1914"

  15. #285
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    Wallace Stevens

    from Stevens, Collected Poetry & Prose

    from THE MAN WITH THE BLUE GUITAR XXVII

    It is the sea that whitens the roof.
    The sea drifts through the winter air.

    It is the sea that the north wind makes.
    The sea is in the falling snow.

    This gloom is the darkness of the sea.
    Geographers and philosophers,

    Regard. But for that salty cup,
    But for the icicles on the eaves--

    The sea is a form of ridicule.
    The iceberg settings satirize

    The demon that cannot be himself,
    That tours to shift the shifting scene.

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