Tattoo (poem)

"Tattoo" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium. It was originally published in 1916, so it is in the public domain.[1] Librivox has made the poem available in voice recording in its The Complete Public Domain Poems of Wallace Stevens.

Tattoo

 The light is like a spider.
 It crawls over the water.
 It crawls over the edges of the snow.
 It crawls under your eyelids
 And spreads its webs there—
 Its two webs.

 The webs of your eyes
 Are fastened
 To the flesh and bones of you
 As to rafters of grass.

 There are filaments of your eyes
 On the surface of the water
 And in the edges of the snow.

Interpretation

Buttel detects Imagistic technique in the poem's Whitman-like naming of physical details.[2] In response to nature, man's natural architecture of flesh and bones has developed so as to catch nature's beauty. We are tattoo'd by it, but equally we tattoo nature with human sensibility.

Notes

  1. Buttel, p. 131
  2. Buttel, p. 131-2
gollark: MRF/second is probably doable easily (that's only 50kRF/t) but MRF/tick needs fusion.
gollark: To make fuels you need reactors burning lesser fuels.
gollark: Anyway, it may not ever happen, as my todo list's length can only be expressed as the size of the set of all real numbers.
gollark: That would depend on how lazy I would be when making it.
gollark: The idea is that you could run the hypothetical web planner in the browser, and even conveniently share design links with people.

References

  • Buttel, Robert. Wallace Stevens: The Making of Harmonium. 1967: Princeton University Press.
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