Six Significant Landscapes
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Stevens

"Six Significant Landscapes" is a poem from Wallace Stevens
Wallace Stevens
Wallace Stevens 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 the Hartford insurance company in Connecticut.His best-known poems include "Anecdote of the Jar",...

's first book of poetry, Harmonium
Harmonium (poetry collection)
Harmonium is a book of poetry by U.S. poet Wallace Stevens. His first book, it was published in 1923 by Knopf in an edition of 1500 copies. He was in middle age at that time, forty-four years old. The collection comprises 85 poems, ranging in length from just a few lines to several hundred...

. It was first published in 1916, so it is in the public domain.
   Six Significant Landscapes


 I

 An old man sits

 In the shadow of a pine tree

 In China.

 He sees larkspur,

 Blue and white,

 At the edge of the shadow,

 Move in the wind.

 His beard moves in the wind.

 The pine tree moves in the wind.

 Thus water flows

 Over weeds.


 II

 The night is of the colour

 Of a woman's arm:

 Night, the female,

 Obscure,

 Fragrant and supple,

 Conceals herself.

 A pool shines,

 Like a bracelet

 Shaken in a dance.


 III

 I measure myself

 Against a tall tree.

 I find that I am much taller,

 For I reach right up to the sun,

 With my eye;

 And I reach to the shore of the sea

 With my ear.

 Nevertheless, I dislike

 The way ants crawl

 In and out of my shadow.


 IV

 When my dream was near the moon,

 The white folds of its gown

 Filled with yellow light.

 The soles of its feet

 Grew red.

 Its hair filled

 With certain blue crystallizations

 From stars,

 Not far off.


 V
 Not all the knives of the lamp-posts,

 Nor the chisels of the long streets,

 Nor the mallets of the domes

 And high towers,

 Can carve

 What one star can carve,

 Shining through the grape-leaves.


 VI

 Rationalists, wearing square hats,

 Think, in square rooms,

 Looking at the floor,

 Looking at the ceiling.

 They confine themselves

 To right-angled triangles.

 If they tried rhomboids,

 Cones, waving lines, ellipses --

 As, for example, the ellipse of the half-moon --

 Rationalists would wear sombreros.


Each of these six landscapes of the imagination is a poem in its own right, each conveying an image, simply sculpted and precise, contributing to a pastiche effect. The first displays the influence of haiku and orientalism on Stevens, the second evokes the romantic mystery of night, the third is a wry comment about the duality of the human condition, the dream in the fourth bears comparison to Klee and Chagall, the fifth acknowledges the subtlety of nature, and the sixth associates this subtlety with a reality that evades a rationalist point of view. The sixth can also be understood as Stevens's gentle contribution to the ancient quarrel between philosophical reason and poetic imagination, recommending that philosophers trade in their square hats for sombreros.
Buttel appreciates in the fourth landscape a hallucinatory effect such that "space shrinks, the imagination expands, and the illogical perspective surprises the reader into a recognition of heavenly grandeur." Apropos of the first landscape, he cites Earl Miner in support of the idea that "the objectivity, indirectness, and condensation of the haiku technique seem to have had a more beneficial and lasting effect on his style than the merely ornamental details of orientalism." Buttel reads the fifth landscape as a reaction against "Romantic softness" in favor of "hard clarity", in the spirit of Imagism
Imagism
Imagism was a movement in early 20th-century Anglo-American poetry that favored precision of imagery and clear, sharp language. The Imagists rejected the sentiment and discursiveness typical of much Romantic and Victorian poetry. This was in contrast to their contemporaries, the Georgian poets,...

. The poem's central symbol is not something beyond the poem or something merely intimated by it, but is rather in the star, in the manner that Ezra Pound
Ezra Pound
Ezra Weston Loomis Pound was an American expatriate poet and critic and a major figure in the early modernist movement in poetry...

 and the Symbolists recommended.
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