Valley Candle

"Valley Candle" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium. It is in the public domain according to Librivox, having been first published prior to the 1923 publication year of Harmonium.

Valley Candle

My candle burned alone in an immense valley.
Beams of the huge night converged upon it,
Until the wind blew.
Then beams of the huge night
Converged upon its image,
Until the wind blew.

Interpretation

Whalen[1] proposes that most critics see the poem as an allegory of the mind. The candle is ablaze with conscious life,[2] or it has the illuminating power of the creative artist.[3] It may be an apology for the imagination's slanted light, which will not sustain a heavy burden.[4]

One interpretive choice point is whether "Valley Candle" should be compared to "Anecdote of the Jar", as granting ordering power to the candle like the jar's. Rehder proposes the comparison. Both objects create the world from which they come; they are the fixed points, the centers, "necessary to change chaos to order and to communicate purpose."[5] Whalen rejects the comparison.[6]

Notes

  1. Whalen, p. 229.
  2. Doggett, F.
  3. Kessler, E.
  4. Riddel, J.
  5. Rehder, as quoted by Whalen, p. 232.
  6. Whalen, p. 232.
gollark: On said 1.12.2 server I had fusion reactors for that.
gollark: That is a lot of EU, from what I remember of industrialcraft.
gollark: Obviously they just loaded a backup, but I got to feel smugly superior for a minute or so.
gollark: The spatial IO thing did work, except the computer system managing it broke somehow so I had to manually teleport in ahead of the explosion (it propagated very slowly, Draconic Evolution is weird and also a bad mod which the server had for some reason but that's not the point), press the button, and teleport back.
gollark: You can use an emulator.

References

  • Doggett, Frank. Stevens’ Poetry of Thought. The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1966.
  • Kessler, Edward. Images of Wallace Stevens. Rutgers University Press, 1972.
  • Rehder, Robert. The Poetry of Wallace Stevens. Macmillan Press, 1988.
  • Riddel, Joseph N. The Clairvoyant Eye: The Poetry and Poetics of Wallace Stevens. Louisiana State University Press, 1965.
  • Whalen, Tom. "'Alone in an Immense Valley': A Note on Stevens' `Valley Candle'". Wallace Stevens Journal. 20.2 (Fall 1996)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.