Wikipedia

Banal Sojourn

"Banal Sojourn" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium. It was originally published in 1919, therefore it is in the public domain.[1]

Banal Sojourn

 Two wooden tubs of blue hydrangeas stand at the foot of the stone steps.
 The sky is a blue gum streaked with rose. the trees are black.
 The grackles crack their throats of bone in the smooth air.
 Moisture and heat have swollen the garden into a slum of bloom.
 Pardie! summer is like a fat beast, sleepy in mildew,
 Our old bane, green and bloated, serene, who cries,
 'That bliss of stars, that princox of evening heaven!' reminding of seasons,
 When radiance came running down, slim through the bareness.
 And so it is one damns that green shade at the bottom of the land.
 For who can care at the wigs despoiling the Satan ear?
 And who does not seek the sky unfuzzed, soaring to the princox?
 One has a malady, here, a malady. One feels a malady.

Interpretation

About this poem Stevens wrote,

"Banal Sojourn" is a poem of (exhaustion in August!) [Stevens' parenthesis]. The mildew of any late season, of any experience that has grown monotonous as, for instance, the experience of life.[2]

Harold Bloom responds: "Stevens, with only rare exceptions, did not comment very usefully upon his own poems. This is not one of the exceptions."[3] Bloom suggests that

the poet feels acutely the universal nostalgia that he is now a touch old to be what clearly he never was, a "princox", a roaring boy or saucy fellow....What the poem shows...is Stevens' anxiety that the poetic voice in him may fail, an anxiety rendered more acute by an imaginative maturity so long delayed."[4]

Challenging Bloom's interpretation, Kia Penso writes, "There is no evidence in the letters or elsewhere to suggest that Stevens suffered from the kind of anxiety that Bloom ascribes to him.".[5] (Evidently she does not consider "Monocle de Mon Oncle" to be such evidence.) She calls Bloom to account for reading the line that begins with "Pardie!" and the following lines "as being about Stevens himself feeling fat and old. And green."[6]

Notes

  1. ^ Buttel, p. 150
  2. ^ Quoted in Penso, p. 13
  3. ^ Quoted in Penso, p. 12.
  4. ^ Quoted in Penso, p. 13.
  5. ^ Penso, p. 14.
  6. ^ Penso, p. 13.

References

  • Buttel, Robert. Wallace Stevens: The Making of Harmonium. 1967: Princeton University Press.
  • Cook, Eleanor. A Reader's Guide to Wallace Stevens. 2007: Princeton University Press.
  • Penso, Kia. Wallace Stevens, Harmonium and the Whole of Harmonium. 1991: Anchor Books.
This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia® - the free encyclopedia created and edited by its online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of Wikipedia® encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information, please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.

Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.