Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2790394720> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 64 of
64
with 100 items per page.
- W2790394720 endingPage "45" @default.
- W2790394720 startingPage "31" @default.
- W2790394720 abstract "Crazy Jane and Professor Eucalyptus:Self-Dissolution in the Later Poetry of Yeats and Stevens Margaret Mills Harper … all talk about God, whether pro or anti, is twaddle. —Wallace Stevens, quoting Professor Joad Fol de rol, fol de rol. —W. B. Yeats, Crazy Jane Reproved PARTICULARLY IN THE TWO magisterial volumes The Tower and The Winding Stair, the later W. B. Yeats is a poet who might be typified by the weighty line, the bardic voice, forms like the poised ottava rima and meditative style that Helen Vendler calls spacious (Our Sacred Discipline 291). Late Wallace Stevens moves into sparer variants of his ongoing poetic preoccupations, offering himself as a diffident minimalist, in Charles Altieri's phrase (321), substituting purgation for harmonium. These are overgeneralizations, of course. A parallel that interests me appears if I juxtapose two late sequences, focusing especially on each poet's late reworking, or redramatizing, of the poetic subject. The two texts I will consider are Yeats's Words for Music Perhaps and Stevens's An Ordinary Evening in New Haven. They are not stylistically or thematically similar, though both represent somewhat analogous moments in each poet's career. Considered together, Yeats's Crazy Jane poems in particular (which form a large part of the sequence Words for Music Perhaps) and Stevens's multi-canto An Ordinary Evening represent ambitious experiments in creating dissolution by two wielders of powerful language. Both works explore the paradox implicit in highly skilled poets confronting the absence of the imagination, the seeming opposite of everything their abilities can and do make possible.1 For Yeats, the effort involved following the magisterial poems of The Tower with the abjection and exultation of a different kind of mask, a different style, and arguably a different approach toward composition, than he had tried before. Words for Music Perhaps was published by Cuala Press in 1932 and then included in The Winding Stair and Other Poems (1933), two years before Yeats's seventieth birthday. The title of the sequence is ironically misleading: the twenty-five short poems of the sequence are not [End Page 31] meant to be set to music—hence Yeats's playful Perhaps. In March 1929, the poet wrote his old friend Olivia Shakespear, I am writing Twelve poems for music—have done three of them (and two other poems)—no[t] so much that they may be sung as that I may define their kind of emotion to myself. I want them to be all emotion and all impersonal (Letters 758). Indeed, the idea of Yeats writing for music seems to have amused both himself and his wife. R. F. Foster quotes George Yeats writing to Thomas McGreevy, a good friend, that William … yesterday came dashing along from his cot to announce that he was going to write twelve songs and I had got to purchase 'a musical instrument' at once and set them to music. … All said songs being of a most frivolous nature! (letter from February 11, 1929, qtd. in Foster 385). Given that she did not play a musical instrument, not to mention that it seems not to have mattered which musical instrument she was meant to buy, frivolous might be an understatement. The twenty-five short poems of Words for Music Perhaps are technically very unlike some of Yeats's weighty and serious late poems, including the poems in magisterial ottava rima like A Dialogue of Self and Soul or Coole Park, 1929 and Coole Park and Ballylee, 1931. The poems that comprise Words for Music Perhaps are light and somewhat tune-like, with short stanzas, frequent uses of refrain, and tetrameter or trimeter rhyming lines suggestive of ballads or Shakespearean songs. The little lyrics are anything but frivolous, though. Instead, their light touch is part of a spiritual/intellectual purpose that includes the question of words' inherent musicality. The sequence foregrounds the idea of simple joy as wisdom, which is common to Yeats's late work. As an oft-cited (and often misquoted) passage in one of his last letters puts it, I am happy, and I think full of an energy, of an energy I had despaired of. It seems to me that I..." @default.
- W2790394720 created "2018-03-29" @default.
- W2790394720 creator A5000198758 @default.
- W2790394720 date "2018-01-01" @default.
- W2790394720 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W2790394720 title "Crazy Jane and Professor Eucalyptus: Self-Dissolution in the Later Poetry of Yeats and Stevens" @default.
- W2790394720 cites W1504209147 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W1584033846 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W1586015144 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2004805571 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2020208902 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2026937667 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2074441727 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2154185818 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2155142829 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W2800857269 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W408365599 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W562692365 @default.
- W2790394720 cites W641388389 @default.
- W2790394720 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/wsj.2018.0003" @default.
- W2790394720 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2790394720 type Work @default.
- W2790394720 sameAs 2790394720 @default.
- W2790394720 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2790394720 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2790394720 hasAuthorship W2790394720A5000198758 @default.
- W2790394720 hasBestOaLocation W27903947201 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C161191863 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C164913051 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C2776445246 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C2777855551 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C124952713 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C138885662 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C142362112 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C161191863 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C164913051 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C2776445246 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C2777855551 @default.
- W2790394720 hasConceptScore W2790394720C41008148 @default.
- W2790394720 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W2790394720 hasLocation W27903947201 @default.
- W2790394720 hasOpenAccess W2790394720 @default.
- W2790394720 hasPrimaryLocation W27903947201 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2351402169 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2353820140 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2355049900 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2367426929 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2375168801 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2387049456 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2387271333 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2388523478 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2391391981 @default.
- W2790394720 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2790394720 hasVolume "42" @default.
- W2790394720 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2790394720 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2790394720 magId "2790394720" @default.
- W2790394720 workType "article" @default.