Gubbinal
Template:Short description "Gubbinal" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium (1923). It is in the public domain according to Librivox.[1]
Interpretation
It can be read as one of his "poems of epistemology", as B. J. Leggett styles it in his Nietzschean reading of Stevens' perspectivism,[2] a minimalistic statement of his interest in the relationship between imagination and the world. The term 'gubbinal' may derive from 'gubbin', slang for a dullard, referring here to someone who takes the world to be ugly and the people sad.[3]
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That strange flower, the sun,
Is just what you say.
Have it your way.
The world is ugly,
And the people are sad.
That tuft of jungle feathers,
That animal eye,
Is just what you say.
That savage of fire,
That seed,
Have it your way.
The world is ugly,
And the people are sad.
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Notes
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Excerpted from Leggett, Early Stevens: The Nietzschean Intertext, 1992, Duke University Press.
- ↑ Nicholson, p. 23: "In somewhat arcane slang 'gubbin' means what it sounds like, a dull person --- the 'you' who insists on the sad ugliness of the world."
References
- Leggett, B.J. Early Stevens: The Nietzchean Intertext. 1982: Duke UP.
- Nicholson, Mervyn. "Reading Stevens' Riddles." College English, Vol. 50, No. 1. (Jan., 1988), pp. 13–31.
- Peterson, Margaret. Wallace Stevens and the idealist tradition. 1983: UMI Research Press