The Course of a Particular
Today the leaves cry, hanging on branches swept by wind,
Yet the nothingness of winter becomes a little less.
It is still full of icy shades and shapen snow.
The leaves cry . . . One holds off and merely hears the cry.
It is a busy cry, concerning someone else.
And though one says that one is part of everything,
There is a conflict, there is a resistance involved;
And being part is an exertion that declines:
One feels the life of that which gives life as it is.
The leaves cry. It is not a cry of divine attention,
Nor the smoke-drift of puffed-out heroes, nor human cry.
It is the cry of leaves that do not transcend themselves,
In the absence of fantasia, without meaning more
Than they are in the final finding of the ear, in the thing
Itself, until, at last, the cry concerns no one at all.
– Wallace Stevens
Question: What does this poem mean?
a) What it says.
b) That “in the absence of fantasia,” everything amounts to nothing.
c) Nature is indifferent to human beings and their imaginary or deceased gods.
d) When “the nothingness of winter becomes a little less,” it is a positive thing, though the phrasing and the rhyme of “nothingness” and “a little less” make you think things are even bleaker than they were.
e) One grows old and one’s powers decline. (Born in Reading, PA (Oct 2, 1879), died Hartford, CT (Aug 3, 1955).)
f) The “meaning” of any sound depends on the existence of an ear.
Posted by The Best American Poetry on February 03, 2021 at 11:10 AM in Multiple Choice, Poems | Permalink
Comments
All this poem means is that Mr. Stevens now is free to consider the next string of thought that otherwise is too short to be saved. Within the context of institutions that would produce poets, if they could, it means the person seated closest to the blackboard is likely the one whose imagination is too meager for the job.
Thanks for letting me let off steam; what has been allowed to happen to poetry is as criminal as the slaughter of Vietnam, and, roughly, co-terminal to it.
Posted by: Dave Read | February 06, 2021 at 06:37 AM
“What has been allowed to happen to poetry is as criminal as the slaughter of Vietnam, and, roughly, co-terminal to it.” That is a very strong statement. How did this happen? Are you thinking of the lack of reverence for tradition? The dismissal of dead white men? The fate of the canon? The debunking of the idea of genius? The neglect of form, meter, rhyme, and other adjuncts? Is it your sense that the “essence” of poetry has been re-defined to serve a socio-political end?
Posted by: Tony Paris | February 06, 2021 at 10:11 AM
It was easy as pie; the academy decided it wanted to add poetry to the list of cultural artifacts and artistic constructs that it makes bank with. (See Yvor Winters, 1930s). The care and feeding of born poets never was part of the equation; it would be about the minting of taught poets (taut?), who would become just what we have today.
Look at the early funding source of the flagship “creative writing” program at Stanford. Look at what happens to Poetry magazine/foundation in the wake of massive BigPharma money.
Born poets are odd people; academic poetry mills produce polished product, ready for pop culture, which ate culture culture’s lunch, at least since the plastic people* emerged victorious from the 1960s. (*see Frank Zappa)
Donald Hall’s career provides an object lesson in what it takes for a “learned” poet to get around to producing good poems. At his valedictory reading/lecture (UNH, Nov. 2017), he said this: “the best American poetry still is Dickinson and Whitman.”
Thanks to him, nobody has to subject herself to such horrors as Exeter, Harvard, Oxford, Stanford, Michigan (including a stint as an unwitting tool of the CIA at the Paris Review.)
My point is that the academy, at its essence, looks backward and tries to make sense of things. One can make marvelous, entertaining, verse using nothing but wrote material; poets must first set roots in the present, then visit the future, take refuge for a while in the library, mess around looking for company, and, if there’s any good will remaining in the tank, set down instructions for their progeny’s edification.
Also, they need to spend time in the south, or otherwise tan their own hides; a thick skin is more important to a poet than the fancy parchment doled out by deans and others with penchants for pomp, circumstance, and regalia designed for the pleasure of the crown.
You want to be a poet, kid? then, follow Wallace Stevens’ example; find a career that won’t cost your soul, walk to work, and use your mind along the way. The money is in the insurance business; write poems for love, not lucre. It is that simple – am I the only simple-minded man, with Internet access?
Now look, our junior poet laureate is all-in with the NFL*. I rest my case. (reserving the right to revise and add to my remarks, at whim, or by invitation!) *NFL was alongside CIA, FBI, LBJ, et al. on the people’s wall of shame, when poetry was yet an amateur pursuit.
Thanks for the soapbox, Tony.
Posted by: Dave Read | February 08, 2021 at 06:18 AM
Why thanks to Donald Hall?
Posted by: Tony Paris | February 09, 2021 at 08:58 AM
Hall died a poet, after decades trying to fit himself into the scholastic canon, thanks largely to Jane Kenyon’s influence, and to what he learned from Henry Moore. Poets belong in the streets, in the delivery room, in the board room, courtroom, garage – everywhere but the yesterday room, the university.
Posted by: Dave Read | February 10, 2021 at 05:33 AM
and furthermore – search for a posthumous take-down of Donald Hall by Lewis Turco, published in “The Hollins Critic.”
Posted by: Dave Read | February 10, 2021 at 05:38 AM
Aren’t you confusing “The Paris Review” with “Encounter”? I never bought the conspiracy theory that the CIA used Abstract-Expressionism for propagandas purposes. Also, as I understand it, Hall quite his tenured faculty position when he was in his 40s. Maybe David Lehman will clarify. He holds Hall in esteem.
Posted by: Tony Paris | February 10, 2021 at 08:48 AM
Peter Matthiessen created the Paris Review as cover for his CIA work; that’s not a secret anymore. Why wouldn’t they meddle in the art market, is it somebody’s sacred cow?
Aren’t we all free to believe whatever we want about the CIA – it is their primary function to operate in the impossibility of total darkness, and to manipulate the lighting everywhere else. Look how they arranged a Nobel for Pasternak. I wonder if they had a hand in Dylan’s?
I asked Donald Hall his thoughts about Dylan’s Nobel – to summarize his response, which was not at all unkind to the Song and Dance man, “…Phil Roth should have got it, and now he never will.”