Copyright 2002 W. W. Norton & Company Copyright 2002 W. W. Norton & Company
The Norton Anthology of American Literature
Volume D: American Literature between the Wars, 1914-1945
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Wallace Stevens

Biography

Born and raised in Reading, Pennsylvania, Wallace Stevens spent three years at Harvard, left to begin a literary career, and then went to law school so he could secure a dependable job. He joined the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company in Connecticut and wrote poetry at night and during summers. Although Stevens participated in literary circles early in his career, he was concerned with neither artistic nor political causes and found that individual activity was more conducive to exploring his interest: the relationship between observer and observed. In his early poetry Stevens reconfigured the ideas of American Transcendentalism: he too positioned the individual as perceiver at the center of society but, unlike the Transcendentalists, Stevens could not be certain that the individual's perceptions came from God. In a modern world where Christianity was losing power, he looked for belief and in later poems suggested that poetry may forge a new faith. His collections of poems include Harmonium (1923), Ideas of Order (1935), Parts of a World (1942), and The Auroras of Autumn (1950). Stevens also published a book of his lectures, The Necessary Angel (1951).

Explorations

Wallace Stevens spent most of his adult life as a prosperous business executive who wrote daring, arcane poetry as an avocation. After World War II, Stevens was surprised to find himself becoming the center of attention on American university campuses, where new generations of students and academics were drawn to his evocative and difficult verse. In fact, interpreting Stevens's poetry is such a major industry in English departments that a reader first encountering his work in an anthology must take care to meet his verse as poetry, rather than as intellectual puzzle. Sunday Morning (1915), one of Stevens's most famous poems, is a good place to begin.

1. The opening two stanzas of Sunday Morning impressionistically describe an unnamed woman in a vaguely tropical setting, apparently staying home on Easter Sunday rather than going to church. Comment on the peculiarities of the description: what details are offered, and what is withheld? What is gained and sacrificed by this cryptic presentation of a dramatic situation?

2. When the solitary woman in her peignoir speaks, do her words sound like plausible human speech? Whom is she speaking to? Why does Stevens give her these words and rhythms? And why is she not allowed to talk for more than a sentence or two at a time?

3. What is the relationship of the speaker to this woman and this scene? The woman is troubled by a crisis of faith; is the speaker? Does he sound above it all, philosophically or aesthetically detached from this and all problems having to do with belief, with meaning? Or does he implicitly have and somehow indicate a stake in this inquiry?

4. In other poems in the NAAL selection, Stevens often assumes the voice of the bemused aesthete, the "magnifico" musician, or magisterial observer. What traditions in American verse is he resisting by assuming this stance? What effects does this stance have in individual poems?

5. There are several poems here about dreams and fictions, even when the problems being confronted are vast: death, faith, the meaning of human experience. What do you make of these fictions? Does Stevens seem to think they are inherently empty or a waste of human effort? Where do you see indications of his views?

Other sites to consult:

http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=125&CFID=10178891&CFTOKEN=96327670: A biography from the Academy of American Poets.

http://www.wesleyan.edu/wstevens/stevens.html: The Web site of the Hartford Friends and Enemies of Wallace Stevens.