Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Response to Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird



Write a blog post that discusses any of the poems from the poetry packet. Be specific, use examples, explain your points and be thoughtful in your response. (3-5 thoughtful and comprehensive paragraphs.)


     Wallace Stevens' Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird stood out to me because of the likeness to traditional Japanese poetry, of which I am a fan.  A collection of 13 short poems, each verse is comprised of strong natural imagery, seemingly abstract thoughts and the mention of a blackbird.  It is my interpretation the Stevens is not literally writing about blackbirds, but using them metaphorically in various meanings.
     Verse I, "Among twenty snowy mountains,/ The only moving thing/ Was the eye of the blackbird." is my favorite of all thirteen, even if I don't fully grasp his meaning.  Stevens' starts off with a vast, bleak, and what I assume to be barron landscape of huge, white mountains and he focuses in on a tiny, living eye.  An eye, not even the entire blackbird but it's eye.  A small part of a small being among a giant scene.
     In verse II, Stevens' writes "I was of three minds,/ Like a tree/ In which there are three blackbirds.".  Here, I think he is using the blackbirds to mirror man's trio of mind, body, and soul.  He could also possibly mean the id, ego, and superego.  In any case, he is describing three birds to one tree, three parts to one mind.
     In verse IV he states "A man and a woman/ Are one./ A man and a woman and a blackbird/ Are one.".  First he refers to the two human forms, male and female, and unifies them as one.  He adds a blackbird but still, they are one.  How can a blackbird unify with man?  They are both alive.  Perhaps Stevens' is saying that all life has value, that all life is unified.
     Stevens' starts his poem off in winter.  In verse III, he references autumn.  In verse X he mentions green light, possibly spring air or a summer storm.  In verse XII he says "The river is moving." which makes me believe the weather is warm.  By verse XIII he writes that it is snowing.  This poem goes in a full circle of seasons, possibly representing the life cycle or something else cyclical.
     I think this poem was written about a lot of things, taking life for granted or overlooking the beauty in simplicity, to name a couple.  However, since Stevens' is notoriously ambiguous and writes with the intent of provoking the reader, the entire meaning is not yet clear to me.
   

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