"Thinkers Without Final Thoughts": John Ashbery`s Evolving Debt to
Transcription
"Thinkers Without Final Thoughts": John Ashbery`s Evolving Debt to
"THINKERS WITHOUT FINAL THOUGHTS": JOHN ASHBERY'S EVOLVING DEBT TO WALLACE STEVENS BY LYNN KELLER I Defending the "studious imitations" of an earlier artist in the work of a contemporary craftsman,John Ashbery once remarked that a "profound impulse received fromanother artisthas to work itself out in the sincerest formof flatterybefore the business of self-discoverycan begin."1 A comparable process in which obvious imitations of a master precede the evolution of a distinct personal style is evident in Ashbery's own "working out" of the impulse he received fromWallace Stevens. In what follows we will trace this development in Ashbery's early volumes, where a shiftin orientation fromStevens' earlier to his later works accompanies the young poet's progress toward more subtle and selective adaptations of Stevens' techniques. Ashbery's firstmajor collection,2 Some Trees (1956), unabashedly adopts both Stevens' theories and Stevens' modes, particularly those of his firstvolume, Harmonium. Some Trees rarelyevokes the voice of the late meditative Stevens; instead, it echoes the more fantasticcreations of Stevens the ring-masterand clown, the inventorof such figuresas the paltrynude, the Emperor of Ice Cream, the Prince of Peacocks. "The Thinnest Shadow," forexample, could easily be mistaken for an early poem of Stevens'. Like a number of poems in Harmoinium, it is a brief narrative about an emblematic fantastic character and is written in short lines reminiscent of nursery rhymes. In Stevens' fashion, the fancifuladjectives "sherrier" and "sherriest" seem to have been chosen, or, more accurately, invented, more fortheir sound than fortheir meaning. The strangeness of these words calls attentionto the sing-song rhyme,as does Stevens' rhymingof pairs such as "Scaramouche" and "barouche" (CP 61)3 or "negress" and "egress" (CP 71). Ashbery's delineation of character follows Stevens' habit of using obesity to indicate viand thinness to connote the absence talityand imaginative fertility, 235 ELH 0013-8304/82/0491-235 $01.00 Vol. 49 Pp. 235-261 Q 1982 byThe Johns Hopkins UniversityPress of those qualities.4 The grotesque fascination with death evident beneath the playful surface of "The Thinnest Shadow" is very like thatof similarlyshort-linedpoems such as "The Worms at Heaven's Gate," "The Jack-Rabbit," and "Cortege for Rosenbloom." Even the same rhymeof"cold" and "mo[u]ld" appears in the final stanza (also four lines long) of Stevens' "The Man Whose Pharynx Was Bad." While few poems in Some Trees fitas neatly into a Stevensian mold as does "The Thinnest Shadow," unmistakable echoes of Stevens' diction and syntax or even of specific lines by Stevens are generously scattered throughout. One cannot read the opening the flickeringevening the martins lines of "Glazunoviana"-"In grow denser. / Rivers of wings surround us and vast tribulation"without thinking of the parallel syntax and imagery of "Sunday Morning": And,in the isolationofthe sky, At evening,casual flocksofpigeonsmake Ambiguousundulationsas theysink, Downwardto darknesson extendedwings. Though Ashbery in his later works rarelycalls attentionto alliteration and assonance, as Stevens consistently does in Harmonium, Some Trees does contain passages where sound play is emphasized-e.g., I wentto the mountainsto interestmyself In the fabulousdinnersof hostsdistantand demure. The foxesfollowedwithendless lights. (ST 70) A Stevensian infatuationwith the exotic is evident in Ashbery's diction and imagerythroughoutthe volume-e.g., "connoisseurs of oblivion, 'a novice was sitting on a cornice, "naked as a roc's egg," "watching her glide aloft in her peplum of bright leaves." Some of Ashbery's more outlandish titles,such as "Meditations of a Parrot" and "Glazunoviana," also follow Stevens' example. The resemblances between Ashbery's early work and Stevens' poetry penetrate deeper, however, than these surface delights. A number of poems in Some Trees explore Stevens' subject matter, and do so using the rhetoricand syntaxof what Helen Vendler has identified as Stevens' most characteristicmode, that of "qualified assertion."5 "The Instruction Manual" stands out as Ashbery's most exuber236 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens ant poem demonstrating the joys of imaginative flight. Here the protagonist, like Stevens' "Ordinary Women" (CP 10), flings monotony behind him and escapes to a richly detailed imagined world. His mind roams in a realm of pleasing colorful images, like Stevens' mind-mothin "Hibiscus on the Sleeping Shores" (CP 22). The blatantly cliche romantic figures Ashbery envisions-earnest young lovers, proud mothers,modest young wives-call attention to the artificialityof this Guadalahara, as does the cinematic manipulation of the point of view-"Let us take this opportunityto tiptoe into one of the side streets." Such techniques create an effect comparable to thatof Stevens' "lingua ... jocundissima" (CP 397); both poets' methods of exaggeration are simultaneously selfindulgent and self-mocking,at once gaily playful and ironically self-protective.They underline the fictivenature ofthe imaginative world while emphasizing the sheer pleasure of such ventures. Fiction is recognized as fictionand appreciated as such; Guadalahara is humorously identified as the "City I wanted most to see, and most did not see, in Mexico!" Yet at the end of "The InstructionManual" Ashbery draws back from his imagined experience, reminding us that such flight is "limited" and this place only a temporaryrefuge. In the closing lines, the church tower reverts into an office building in which a bored employee is confined. This movement of qualification follows a typical Stevensian pattern,evident, forexample, in "Hibiscus on the Sleeping Shores," where the last lines remind us of the tedious reality of "stupid afternoons" to which we must inevitably return. A similar movement of qualification occurs in "Illustration," this time accomplished in part by the use of Stevensian syntax. Like "The Thinnest Shadow," this poem presents a Harmonium-like third-personnarrativeabout an emblematic character. The storyis delivered playfully,punctuated by puns-"Begging her to come off it"-and comical details-"A mother offered her some nylons / Stripped fromher very legs." But the theme is serious, as it is in most of Stevens' apparentlyplayfulpoetry.The novice's ceremonial suicide, motivated by a desire to "move figuratively,"is an illustration of the universal need for an imaginative vision of a grander human potential. Ashbery's "novice," then, is a version of Stevens' "figure of capable imagination" (CP 249) or "major man" (e.g., CP 387), the exponent of a noble idea of man to which others may aspire. The ceremonial nature of the novice's behavior is also Lynn Keller 237 Stevensian; Stevens regarded poetryas a necessary replacement for religion as well as a formof apotheosis (CP 378). Like much of Stevens' poetry dealing with the human desire to "resemble a taller / Impression of ourselves," this poem employs the tentative syntaxwhich Vendler has identified as characteristic of Stevens' "search for a middle route between ecstasy and apathy."6Part II of "Illustration"opens witha generalizedpropo- sition which explains the meaning and value ofthe suicidal gesture. Its phrasing is distinctlyStevensian, employing the normative and optative "must'' and "may." By drawing an analogy between the woman and moths attracted to a flame, Ashbery then asserts that those who foolishlydestroythemselves forimaginative enrichment do not lessen the statureof we who behave more prudently; in fact, "we twinkle [flame-like]under the weight /Of indiscretions." After thatpoint, however, the poem calls this affirmationmore and more into question, as Ashbery progressively weakens the link between the "novice" and the "we" of author and audience. The optative mood now carries implications of failure; while "'we might have soared fromearth," uplifted by her exemplary liberating gesture, it is not clear that we did in fact do so. Moreover, the woman is now reduced in stature to "only an effigy/ Of indifference."The poem closes, as Stevens' often do, with a simile, not asserting is but merely as if. The simile here-and this is distinctly Ashbery's touch-acts as a mystifyingveil. While its meaning is opaque, it seems to sever completely the connection between the woman and the audience, a split which radically qualifies the image in part I of genuine spectator involvement in this ceremonial. "The Mythological Poet" provides another example of Ashbery's early Stevensian work, this time involving a more abstract emblematic figure. The poem's subject is a common one in Stevens: the poet's role in combatting the effects of the pressure exerted by realityor "the world of things" on the ideal world of art. The "fabulous and fastidious" poet-Stevensian language and alliteration-described in part II coincides with Stevens' vision of a poet whose imagination is grounded in "things as they are" and who can discover Olympia in the crusty smokestacks of suburban Oxydia (CP 182). Afterrevealing the corruptionand disruption of ideal beauty by the world of things in part I, Ashbery offersin part II the possibility that the poet who remains "Close to the zoo, acquiescing / To dust, candy, perverts" can reestablish harmony 238 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens and reveal beauty in the mundane. Like Stevens, Ashbery struggles to affirmthe value and power of the imagination, yet does so with tentative syntax.There is more longing than certaintyexpressed by Ashbery's urgentquestions, "For isn't there,/ He says ... ?" "And oh . . . mightnot . .. ?" Without the disguises provided by Stevens' strings of appositives and by his extended syntax, Ashbery's rhetorichere is more obviously one of doubt and longing than that of his modernist predecessor. The many poems in Some Trees writtenin dramatic and descriptive modes, using self-protectiveand self-mocking exaggeration, exotic diction, and elaborate sound play establish a clear link between the early work of Ashbery and of Stevens. Stevens' later poetry moves away from the buoyant sensuality and dramatic character of Harmonium toward more discursive, dialectical, and explicitly philosophical modes. This more meditative and linguistically austere Stevens is one who is more significantforAshbery's later works, though his presence is sometimes felt in Some Trees. "Le Livre Est Sur La Table," more than any other poem in this volume, points toward the Stevensian character of Ashbery's later poetry. In "Le Livre" Ashbery displays a Stevensian fondness forpropositional language and for seemingly logical argument. The poem opens with a grand and abstractproposition. The idea expressed is central to Ashbery's aesthetics, since his poetry"exists" by ellipses or "deprivation," and by juxtaposition or "logic / Of strange position." Then a phrase indicating deductive reasoning, "this being so," introduces a particular example: 'we can only imagine" the woman who exemplifies ''beauty, resonance, integrity.""Yet we know what her breasts are"-that is to say, this imagining is a form of genuine knowledge-"and we give fullness to the dream." As Stevens frequentlydoes, Ashbery is here asserting the importance of the imagination's contributionto reality,the value of "The difference that we make in what we see" (CP 344). Two examples of man "giving fullness" follow: we perceive and speak as if tables supportbooks and inanimate objects such as pens willfullyaid us in our endeavors. While apparently furtheringhis logical argument, Ashbery has subtly introduced its qualification and has shiftedthe poem into a less confident mood. For his second example-"the plume leaps in the hand"-is far-fetchedenough to make us question the authenticityof such imaginative domination. Lynn Keller 239 In selecting such common objects as a book, a table, and a pen as his examples, Ashbery was, according to a statement he made in 1973, "half-consciously imitative of Stevens." He cites "An Ordinary Evening in New Haven" as an example of the kind of "meditative verse" he had in mind, in which "the things in a room and the events of everyday life can enter and become almost fossilized in the poems."7 The questions which conclude section I of "Le Livre" make Ashbery's qualification of his initial proposition more explicit. Like Stevens, Ashbery presents observations in the formof questions,8 here demonstratingthat man has no control over a harsh and indifferent cosmos, and that the imagination is powerless to prevent suffering.Antitheticalpropositions lie at the heart of this poem, as they do in much of Stevens' work: it is true both that the mind has dominion over the world and thatthe world controlsthe mind. The poem gives the appearance of logical argument, while in fact it represents an exploration in search of some middle way in which logical distinctions may be blurred and the paradox resolved. The second section of "Le Livre" continues to investigate the relationship of mind/artand reality, now using the Stevensian symbol of the sea representing material reality. Granting "The maker's rage to order words of the sea"" (CP 130), Ashbery's poem questions whether in factit mightnot have been "the dark voice of the sea /That rose" (CP 129) or whether "all the secrets vanish[ed] when /The woman left" (ST 75). Young Ashbery will not assert, as Stevens did before him, that "She was the single artificerof the world / In which she sang" (CP 129); less confident,or less willing to proclaim what in fact may reflecthuman desire and need more than truth,he will only remind us of the questions which we must keep asking. This pseudo-logical discursive mode of later Stevens acquires a permanent place in Ashbery's work. However, Ashbery subsequently abandoned some of the later Stevensian techniques with which he experimented in Some Trees. Like many beginning poets who wish to refine or establish their skills as craftsmen,the young Ashbery sometimes worked in strictly regulated poetic forms. Those he favored tended to require repetition of words or phrases, thereby creating an effectvery like that of Stevens' less regulated repetition of key words. Stevens does make some use of repetition in Harmonium,9 but his more characteristicrepetitions appear in the later works where common terms recurring in differentposi240 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens tions or relations lend an appearance of simplicityto the presentation ofcomplex and abstractideas.10The reiterationofconcrete and ordinaryterms in the three sestinas in Some Trees, and the patterned restatementof lines and words in "Pantoum" and "Canzone"9create a similaraura ofparticularityand clarityin poems with meanings. At times the mystificationseems difficultand mystifying to result fromthe poet's having no intended meaning in mind as he investigates what meaning might be created automatically by placing a limited number of words in variouslyarrangedproximity. At othertimes,in more Stevensian fashion,Ashberyis interestedin conveying certain sophisticated concepts while restrictinghimself to a small and simple vocabulary. This is the case in "The Painter. Here again, we have a Stevens-like third-personnarrative,and again the sea symbolizes reality. Stevens' themes abound: the artist's frustrateddesire to capture "things as they are" (cf. CP 165, II); the problem of solipsism-is all art self-portraiture?-and the recurrentquestion from"The Idea of Order at Key West" whether the sea or the self shapes art's order. Some of the ideas, of course, are distinctly Ashbery's; forexample, the finalwhiteness of the canvas on which the painter has captured the sea's portraitreflectsAshbery's notion that "<puttingit all down" leads ultimately to the same end as "leaving all out" (TP 3). Nonetheless, the writinghas a consistently Stevensian character,largelybecause ofthe word repetition,which is not limited to the recycling of end-words required in a sestina. "Sea," forinstance, is not one of these end-words, yet appears six times; "paint," "painter," and "imagine" also recur. The vocabulary of this poem thus seems as limited, as lean, as that of, say, "Sketch of the Ultimate Politician" (CP 355-6) which begins: He is the finalbuilderofthetotalbuilding, The finaldreamerofthetotaldream, Or will be. Buildingand dreamare one. There is a totalbuildingand thereis A totaldream.There are wordsofthis, Words,in a storm,thatbeat aroundthe shapes. "The Painter" concludes with an evasive simile using "as though" (the same device also appears in the thirdstanza), a finalStevensian touch with which the poet conveys the sense of an explanation, a truthglimpsed, without in factassertingthat it is the truth. Many of the traitswhich link Some Trees to Harmonium are not Lynn Keller 241 characteristicof Ashbery's later work. The indulgent language and the emblematic personifications,forexample, disappear as Ashbery develops his own more subdued manner and quieter voice. Progressingfromhis earlywholeheartedadoptionof Stevens' ideas about poetryand the poet, the maturingAshbery selects those which he findsgenuinely congenial. He discards some of Stevens' principles, such as his conception of the poet's hieratic role. Others he qualifies; for example, Stevens' "necessary fiction" becomes, in the hands ofthe laterpoet, the inescapable fictionwhich is not always a desirable condition of human perception. Still other principles, such as the desire forpoetryto escape stiffening formulationsand to capture the activityof consciousness, Ashbery reinforcesand extends so that they guide his development of innovative poetic methods. II Virtuallyno Stevensian traitsare evident in the disjointed automatic poetryof Ashbery's second volume, The Tennis Court Oath (1962). This dramatic shiftaway fromthe obvious Stevensian imitationsof Some Trees seems to have freed Ashberyto get on with "<thebusiness of self-discovery"; in his next volume, Rivers and Mountains (1966), he has discovered his own voice and his own thematic emphases, and manages much more subtle manipulation oftechniques and principles adapted fromhis immediate predecessor, Wallace Stevens.'1 A transitionalvolume, Rivers and Mountains reveals a movement toward a more discursive mode, employing longer lines grouped in more extended clusters. "Into the Dusk-Charged Air" provides an example of how Ashbery has modified the linguistic experiments of The Tennis Court Oath in order to create a more communicative poetry,and how he has adapted Stevens' themes to uses which are distinctly his own. This playful poem is shaped by the apparently arbitrary device of requiring that each line mention at least one of the world's rivers.Each riveris named only once, and is described in a simple coherent sentence. With this amusing device Ashberydemonstrates the potential for endless variety within the limits of a given framework,as Stevens does in "Sea Surface Full of Clouds." Both poems focus on an aspect ofrealitywhich is fluidand moving; but while Stevens demonstrates the limitless inventive power of the fertile imagination, Ashbery points to a less flamboyantand more mundane means of enriching one's experience. 242 JohnAshbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens Ashberyavoids the extravagantornamentationof Stevens' diction and imagery. The tone of "Into the Dusk-Charged Air" is matterof-fact;its lines are often prosaic-"The Mississippi / Is one of the world's longest rivers, like the Amazon. / It has the Missouri fora tributary"-and its figuresare frequentlytrite-"the Rhine sings its eternal song." Yet the poem shows how much variety is available within the confines of such familiar language. Ashbery's diction ranges from the formal-"fat billows encrusted the Dneister's / Pallid flood -to the technical-"The Arkansas erodes /Anthracite hummocks"-to the banal-"People walk near the Trent"-to the Parana stinks." Even when the poem comes colloquial-"The closest to Stevens' ostentatious sound play- "If... the Albany /Arrestyour development, can you resist the Red's /Musk, the Meuse's situation?"-Ashbery avoids the recherche terms and exaggerated sensuality of "Sea Surface"-"Like damasks that were shaken off/ From the loosed girdles in the spangling must" (CP 101). Using a predominantly common vocabulary, Ashbery simply varies his sentence structurein order to demonstratethatordinarylanguage is as variable as the world's rivers,and as interesting. "Into the Dusk-Charged Air" is only one of many possible examples fromRivers and Mountains which demonstrate the poet's progress in findingthe kinds of diction which are most meaningful and comfortableforhim. Ashbery's diction, like Stevens', is varied and widely inclusive, and both poets continually juxtapose the abstract against the concrete, the formalagainst the casual. By the time he was writingRivers and Mountains, however, Ashbery had established his own range of diction, which descends fartherdown the scale of colloquialism than Stevens'-e.g., "I'd like to bugger you all up, /Deliberately falsifyall your old suck-ass notions"-and ascends less high into the realm of elaborate decoration. Stevens believes "that in poetrybigness and gaity are precious characteristics ofthe diction"'(NA 152), and he thereforetries to bring new life to fancywords that have vanished into dusty lexicons. In contrast, Ashbery,in his mature work, is more at home revitalizingthe worn prosiac language of cliche discourse and folk aphorisms. A tongue-in-cheek manner, a campiness whose self-mockeryalmost disguises sincerity, usually accompanies Ashbery's most heavyhanded cliches. Yet these exaggeratedly tritestatementsare almost always mixed with or closely followed by less conventional formulations reinforcingthe same notions; thus the reader cannot mistake the poet's underlying seriousness. Lynn Keller 243 For example, in "The Ecclesiast," Ashberypresents the lamentable universality and "humdrum"-ness of sufferingin language which is not only proverbial, but also so heavily overlaid with cliches thatone mightbe tempted to dismiss as disdainful mockery the third verse paragraph-.--"Forthe shoe pinches, even though it fitsperfectly./ Apples were made to be gathered,also the whole host of the world's ailments and troubles." One cannot do so, however, since the bleak perspective of these lines is legitimized (as well as alleviated) in the movingly direct lines which follow: "and across the sunlight darkness is taking root anew / In intense activity.You shall never have seen itjust this way /And thatis to be your one reward." By slightlymodifyinghackneyed phrases or by mixing cliches with less banal diction, Ashbery infuses fresh energy into time-wornexpressions. Ashbery's most earnest declarations of feeling are now usually distinguished by slack syntaxand casual diction-"What is agreeable / Is to hold your hand. The gravel / Underfoot.The time is for coming close." (RM 14)-sometimes interspersed with simple lyricism I prefer"you'' in the plural,I want"you," You mustcome to me, all goldenand pale Like the dew and the air. AndthenI startgettingthisfeelingofexaltation. (RM 26). The language with which Ashbery expresses his more private feelings slides easily into cliche, allowing him to controla complex dual tone in which he simultaneously makes a sincere statement and comments wrylyupon it. For instance, ... You mustnot,then, Be verysurprisedifI am alone; it is all foryou, The night,and the stars,and the waywe used to be (RM 14) contains a genuine lament, but is presented with an ironic humor that indicates the speaker has some perspective on his own selfindulgence, and on the commonness of his situation. The refined control of shiftingtones, the increasing sureness of voice and naturalness of diction in Rivers and Mountains accompany the appearance of those subjects which predominate in Ashbery's later work. The word "subjects" is perhaps inadequate, since, as the poet has stated, "There are no subjects in the usual sense, except the very broad one of an individual consciousness 244 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens confrontingor confrontedby the world of external phenomena."'12 In any case, Rivers and Mountains is the firstvolume in which Ashbery's interestin poetry as a record of mental process is clearly apprehensible. Here again Stevens is surely a guide, forit is he who defined modern poetry as "The poem of the mind in the act of finding / What will suffice" (CP 239) and who emphasized that poetryis a process in a constantlyadvancing present. Both men are content to be "Thinkers without final thoughts / In an always incipient cosmos" (OP 115), or, in Ashbery's words, "continuing but ever beginning / My perennial voyage" (RM 44). Ashbery's "subject" revolves around broad epistemological questions concerning how and what we know. Like Stevens, he offers varied and often contradictoryanswers. Since both poets identifyfluxas the only constant in the universe, both are intenton being true to ever-changing perceptions ratherthan tryingto establish any fixed truths.Truth, forwhich they do search, is a relative matter,more locatable in the process of searching than in any point reached: ... Each moment Of utteranceis the trueone; likewisenone are true, Only is the boundingfromair to air,a serpentine Gesturewhichhides the truthbehinda congruent Message,the way air hides the sky. (RM 27) Ashbery has found strikingways to embody in his poetic techniques this conviction that what most closely corresponds with truthcan be mirroredonly in the motion between one moment of consciousness and the next. In the late '60s Ashbery said that the characteristicdevices in his verse- "ellipses, frequent changes of tone, voice (that is, the narrator'svoice), point of view" are intended "<togive an impression of flux."'13These shiftsand bewildering omissions are the source of much of the difficulty of Ashbery's poetry. By depriving the reader of many of the clues by which he customarilylinks particular passages to earlier and later ones, these techniques serve to bind the reader to the immediate moment in the poem. He is thereby forced to participate in the poet's metaphysical stance, to "[have] /The progression of minutes by accepting them, as one accepts drops to rain / As they forma shower, and without worrying about the fine weather that will come after" (RM 32). This is not to say that there are no recurrent images or othertraditionaldevices which give unityand coherence Lynn Keller 245 to Ashbery's poetic statements. But there is an insistence, both thematicand technical, on the certitude of continual change, on the irreducible complexity of experience, and on the necessity of accepting both these conditions. The constant evasion of perception and articulation by protean realityor truthis the thematicfocus of "Clepsydra," the poem which marks Ashbery's full entrance into the meditative and abstractly metaphysical mode of late Stevens. The opening of the poem demonstrates that Ashbery is furtherdeveloping Stevens' method of giving fullness to abstractions by frequent reference to concrete objects and ordinaryphenomena; both poets describe realms which are at once "mysterious and near" (RM 28). The question which opens "Clepsydra," "Hasn't the sky?" would seem to arise froma specific context, as if abstracted from the middle of a particular dialogue. The narration and explanation which follow also seem tied to an actual moment and landscape; but because all antecedents are missing, the concrete termstake on a metaphorical quality without their figurativereferencebeing clear. Not until the tenth line is it apparent that "Hasn't the sky?" is a truncated formulation of the eternal human query about the nature of the "basic principle operating behind" the universe. We are then told thatthe answer is as ungraspable as a mirage, as obscure as the motion of river fronds, as unfixable as a waterfall that is perpetually descending to another level. The poem is a mimetic representationof that figurativewaterfall or water-clock (a clepsydra is a water-clock); it attempts to follow the stream of consciousness which, in its acute responsiveness, cannot stand still. The movement mightbe temporarilyallayed by a solipsistic stance-we "'are / The reply that prompted the question"-but this peace is as ephemeral as all other "truths." Momentaryflashes of insightare the most one can hope for:"it was these / Moments that were the truth,although each tapered / Into the distant surrounding night" (RM 28). As the poem goes on to explore the nature of these moments, the question of their permanence and coherence, and the meaning of the time that surrounds them,the process of the searching consciousness is reflected in the poem's syntacticstructure.To convey the uninterruptedyet varied flow of experience, Ashbery often relies on remarkablyextended syntax. In this Stevens is almost certainly a model,14 for one of Stevens' most distinctive skills is his ability to draw out a single sentence over as many as eighteen lines (see, forexample, CP 466, 246 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens II) by using appositives and qualifications. Moreover, Stevens' use of extended syntax reflects the same principles that apparently motivate Ashbery's: a desire to capture the world's undulation in one's syntax,and a belief that an object or experience can be most accurately rendered by an inclusive portrayal in which the whole can be understood from the 'sum of its complications' (NA 87). Good examples of Ashbery's typical methods of syntacticalelaboration and suspension are provided by two consecutive sentences from"Clepsydra" (11. 16-36, RM 29). The firstof these, which begins, "There was only a breathless waste," is ten lines long. The second and third lines are an apposite description of "breathless waste," furtherdeveloping Ashbery's revision of the Christian proposition, "In the beginning was the Word." The next fourlines qualify the idea presented in the previous three, beginning with the mock-academic formulation,"Though one must not forgetthat the nature of this / Emptiness, these previsions, / Was that... Again terms are expanded in figurativeappositives typical of Stevens before moving into a furtherqualification introduced by "ex- cept that. . . ." Ashbery extends the second of these sentences over eleven lines by using a protracted simile comparing the way "an imaginary feeling" "protected its events and pauses" to a telescope's "protection" of a distant mountain vista. He develops the simile in such detail that the mountain scene, originally merely a tangential comparison, becomes the object of focus. On the next page he offersan alternative simile, which he again elaborates fora number of lines until a slight shiftin the poem's focus again takes place. In these ways, Ashbery recreates the meandering of human consciousness in a world without fixed truths. Even where the sentences are shorter,Ashbery relies heavily on logical terms of contradictionand qualification, such as "but" and "although." This reflectshis epistemological faiththat the most lasting and truthful perspectives are those which are "ncomplicatedlike the torrent/ In new dark passages" -a phrase whose double entendre on literary and geological ".passages" is undoubtedly intentional. Because Ashbery tries to render the complexity of individual consciousness as he finds it, paradox is a prevalent in his work as it is in Stevens'. Some of these paradoxes are simple and rathercommon, being based on man's ability to entertain contradictoryemotions simultaneously-"a feeling, again, of emptiness, but of richness" (RM 30). Others are conceptually more difficult;forexample, Lynn Keller 247 it is the "'egotistical" "blindness" of what I take to be two lovers (though theymightbe two aspects of one consciousness) "turned in on each other" to the exclusion of the rest of the world that allows them access to clear visions ofthatworld. These momentsof clarity, in turn,are ephemeral and ungraspable yet permanent,isolated yet joined. What happens in any moment is distinct,intended forthat moment alone; nonetheless that present is impossible to locate, scarcely called into being before it is gone. Like Stevens' paradoxes, and his proliferating resemblances and metaphors, Ashbery's paradoxes point ultimately toward an affirmationof essential unity in the cosmos.15 Ashbery's universe is like a mobius strip-a "single and twin existence"-and by accepting the twists of paradox the poet is able to affirm,"In this way any direction taken was the rightone, / Leading firstto you, and throughyou to / Myself that is beyond you and which is the same thing as space" (RM 32). Ashbery shares some of Stevens' "passion foryes" (CP 320), but as the child of a later and even darker time, Ashbery restrictshis affirmationswithin narrowerlimits.Though there may be a "sphere of pure wisdom," we will never see in it more than groping shadows, and even this reductive experience will be retained only as if it were the impression left by a powerful dream. Unable to celebrate presences, Ashbery takes comfort in "non-absence" (RM 27). The semantic content of Ashbery's lines thereforetends to reinforce the doubting aspect of Stevens' qualified assertions. Comparing Ashbery's use of Stevensian linguistic patternsin Rivers and Mountains with those in Some Trees, we are more conscious of the absence of buoyant optimism in the later volume. There is nothing particularly cheering about statements like these from "Clepsydra": It maybe assumedthatyou have won,thatthis Wooden and externalrepresentation Returnsthe fullecho ofwhatyou meant or ... and you Mustwear themlike clothing,movingin the shadowof Yoursingleand twinexistence,wakingin intact Appreciationof it,while morningis stilland beforethe body Is changedby the facesof evening. 248 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens Yet the very moderation of such statements gives them an aura of authority and wisdom which is nonetheless reassuring and affirming. Ashbery shares with Stevens, or rather with Stevens at the soberer wintryend of his polarized vision, a sense of man's isolation in the cosmos. Both poets regard poetryas the attemptto bridge the gap between man and his world. Though Ashbery is more conscious of the limits of what words or imagination can accomplish-of "the dividing force / Between our slightest steps and the notes taken on them" (RM 32)-both men concur that: Fromthisthe poem springs:thatwe live in a place That is notour own and, muchmore,notourselves And hardit is in spite ofblazoned days. (CP 383) This painful sense of alienation provides the impulse for "The Skaters," the long poem that culminates Rivers and Mountains. The thematic areas explored in "The Skaters" are closely related to those which Stevens usually investigates-the value of the imagination, the artist's "rage to order," the necessity of art's discarding old forms and replacing them with fresh ones. A more sophisticated version of "The Instruction Manual," "The Skaters" centers on the playful presentation of imaginative voyages. But this more complicated and philosophical poem is less concerned with the realms to which the imagination transportsus than with the processes of voyaging and returning,of integratingimaginative experience into ordinaryexperience, and of relating the order established in art to the order or disorder of reality. The structureand style of the poem reflectthe complexity and fluidityof these ideas and of the experiences fromwhich they derive. Like Stevens' later long poems, which are structuredto follow the movement of the thinking mind, "The Skaters" does not progress froma particularstartingpoint to a climactic finish.Instead, its formis like a musical theme and variations in which the same ideas recur,though seen fromvaried perspectives and in differentstyles as in a mind attemptingto refine its understanding. Thus the four numbered sections, though distinct,are more complementarythan progressive. Section I is based primarilyon memories of childhood attempts to escape boredom and loneliness through imaginative adventure.' Part II is a collage of visions of adult travel-some Lynn Keller 249 remembered, some imagined,-which appear and collapse, creating a sense of disconcerting impermanence and wondrous inventive fertility.Part III presents a generally more propositional and analytic examination of imaginative voyaging. Part IV provides an acceleration of the shiftingscenes, images, and voices, until from the spinning fragmentsof life, real and imagined, arises a momentaryvision of perfectorder. These sections are interdependent; not only themes, but also motifs from earlier sections, such as the perspective lines of page 36 and the skaters' lengthening arches of page 37, appear repeatedly in later sections. Moreover, each section, like the waterfall of "Clepsydra," perpetually "Drums at differentlevels" (RM 27) as the narrationshiftsfromacademic exposition, to lyrical description, to metaphysical elaboration, to cliche visions in archaic diction, to commentaryon the poem itself or of the poet's voices upon each other. The whole poem moves like the skaters who ... elaboratetheirdistances, to the mass, Takinga separateline to its end. Returning theyjoin each other Blottedin an incrediblemess ofdarkcolors,and again reappearingto takethe theme Some littledistance. (RM 37) Therefore, what is important,as Ashbery declares, is not an individual passage or even the impression made by the whole, but ratherthe action by which it is created and the structurein which it unfolds. What is of interest is the mind in the act of finding-"the rhythmof the series of repeated jumps, fromabstract into positive and back to a slightlyless diluted abstract" (RM 39). Given their shared preoccupation with change and process, it is not surprisingthat Stevens and Ashbery rely heavily on a common group of images and metaphors. The phenomena of weather and climate-sun, snow, etc.-and the units into which we divide cyclical time-day and night, winter and summer, morning and afternoon-are as prevalent in Ashbery's poems as in Stevens'. In Stevens' work these terms can be grouped into orderly systems; certain mental states, ideas, colors, places are linked to particular seasons.17 This seems to be less true of Ashbery's poetry,but "The Skaters" does provide evidence that by the mid-'60s Ashbery was using terms denoting environmental conditions in extended metaphors forinner states. 250 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens Though Ashbery develops key metaphors over the course of the entire long poem, he does not, as Stevens does, sustain them on a consistent metaphorical plain. Perhaps because of his recognition that if a poet "keep[s] harping on this traditional imagery[,] the reader will not be taken in" (RM 58), Ashberykeeps one step ahead of his reader by ostentatiously shiftingback and forthbetween the literal and metaphorical. "The Skaters," like Stevens' "The Comedian as the Letter C," is based on the ancient trope by which a voyage represents both the progress of life and the process of selfdiscovery. Aware thathis readers will be familiarwith this convention, Ashbery calls attentionto his own artificeby providing obvious clues which allow us to distinguish literal voyaging fromimaginative and metaphorical voyaging. By presenting so many of his scenes as pure fantasyto begin with,Ashbery forestallshis readers feeling smug or bored when they recognize, for instance, that a rainy day is a projection of the speaker's dampened spirits,and an alligator infested swamp his slough of despond (RM 45). Since these meanings are made blatantlyobvious, the reader is forced to focus on the more challenging problem of understanding the mental process which brings the speaker to the point where "again the weather is fine and clear'' and the journey ''is on.'' Such anticipatorydeflation is a common Ashbery technique. Though amusing, Ashbery's self-conscious manner of calling attention to the artificeof the literaryconventions he employs is not merely a game. As we have seen, it is a technique by which he directs the reader's attentiontoward the real issues at hand without reducing the fun of his poetry. Images, he implies, are merely a vehicle forideas: "The human brain, with its trayof images /Seems a sorcerer's magic lantern" (RM 36). Ashbery wishes to take pleasure in sleight of hand without evading the poet's more serious responsibilities. By transformingthe "maple seed pods ... splatteringdown" into "birch pods ... clatteringdown" into "magnolia blossoms" which "fall with a plop" in section IV, Ashbery pursues Stevens' principle that the "motive formetaphor" is to provide the "exhilaration of changes" (CP 288). He employs a varietyof related images since any number of them can serve equally well as instances of a single governing process. Ashbery has a differentreason forundercuttingthe more cliche figureshe uses, and that is genuine ambivalence; cliches are both true and dangerous, useful and inadequate. For Ashbery,all verbal formulations"are a kind of flagellation, an entity of sound / Into Lynn Keller 251 which being enters, and is apart" (RM 34). That is to say, words become an essential part of the experience they grow out of, yet there is a painful and unavoidable gap between expression and experience. Words are valuable since they do "[bring] down meaning," but they offera dangerous temptationto falsifytruthin accordance with "wishful thinking." Ashbery often links this "<wishful thinking'" with traditional patterns of language and thought.When he wishes to emphasize that an attitude is particularly reductive in its simple optimism, he often uses diction and syntaxwhich are not only cliche, but also archaic: And away they pour, in the sulfuroussunlight, To the aqua and silver waters where stands the glistening white ship And into the greatvessel they flood,a motleyand happy crowd Chanting and pouring down hymnson the surfaceof the ocean. (RM 46) In so doing, Ashbery stresses that this comfortable perspective from the past is too familiar and too easy; the contemporary poet, in contrast, ... is best Face to face with the unsmiling alternatives of his nervewracking existence. Placed squarely in frontof his dilemma, on all foursbefore the lamentable spectacle of the unknown. (RM 41) This conviction is in line with modernist principles, as is Ashbery's dictum that the world should be purged of all trash from the past (RM 37, 49). To accomplish this "general housekeeping" (RM 49) Ashbery here institutes the poetic "flame fountain" in which conventional scenes appear only momentarily "in the gaps in the smoke" before they are effaced. Nonetheless, as we saw in "Clepsydra," Ashbery's hopes concerning the power of poetry are somewhat less sanguine than Stevens'. Despite Ashbery's desire for novelty and freshness, the scenes he paints do remain essentially conventional. Moreover, he no longer shares Stevens' confidence in the artist's ability to shape words in new ways which will enlarge men's thinking and enable men to attain a more noble, more heroic stature. The poet's attempts to develop new, more sophisticated forms of "finer expression" are frustrated because "The human mind / Cannot retain 252 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens anythingexcept perhaps the dismal two-note theme / Of some sodden 'dump' or lament" (RM 34). The poet thereforefinds himself trapped: So back we go to the old, imprecisefeelings,the Commonknowledge,the importanceofduly suffering and the occasionalglimpses Of some balmyfelicity. (RM 40) ... Words, like the painter's perspective lines, provide only a seeming order. Speaking of the ordering effectof these, and, by extension, of poetic lines, Ashbery says they provide ... some comfort afterall, forour volitionto see mustneeds conditionthese phenomenato a certaindegree. But it would be rashto derivetoo muchconfidence froma situationwhich,in the last analysis, scarcelywarrantsit. WhatI said firstgoes: sleep, death,and hollyhocks And a new twilightstained,perhaps,a slightly unearthlierperiwinkleblue, But no dramaticargumentsforsurvival,and please no magicjustification of results. (RM 53) While Stevens asserts that"A candle is enough to lightthe world. / It makes it clear"' (CP 172), Ashbery will only go so far as to declare that the poet's task is "4tohold the candle up to the album" (RM 41).18 He makes no proclamations about the clarity of that illumination,nor does he strikea hieratic pose. Nonetheless, as one who colors the sky a "slightly unearthlier" shade, Ashbery is carrying on, in chastened form,the Romantic tradition in which the poet acts as private interpreterof the heavens. Ashbery's romantic roots, which are also Stevens, are most apparent in his next volume, The Double Dream of Spring (1970). III Some of the ways in which Ashbery's work grows out of the Romantic traditionhave already been suggested: his dissatisfaction with inherited formsand restrictionswithin each one (supposedly) cannot accurately reflectreality; his aspiration toward originality;19 his use of materials fromcommon life and ordinary speech; his probing of individual experience; his focus on the imagination, on Lynn Keller 253 its place and powers in a world unlike itself.Ashbery's awareness of the division between his own conscious nature and the unconscious world which surrounds him suggests, as Robert Pinsky has noted (speaking not just of Ashbery,but of contemporarypoetry in general), and modernistpoetry-and, a continuity betweencontemporary beyond that, a continuitywith the Romantic poetryof the nineteenthcentury.Monumentaland familiar,the conflictsare between the conscious and the unconsciousforceswithinthe a flowof mind:betweenthe idea ofexperienceas unreflective, absolutelyparticularmoments,and the realityof language as abstractcategories.20 an arrangement of perfectly reflective, Pinsky has demonstrated that these broad conflicts have been inherited by virtually every modern poet, and that "it sometimes seems hard to find a modern poem which does not touch on the problem at least glancingly, as a kind of second subject."'21 What is striking about The Double Dream of Spring, however, is the number of its poems in which these conflictsare the primarysubject. Furthermore,the volume is notably more lyrical than those preceding, and rural settings are more frequent. In typical Romantic fashion, a landscape or a particular scene often provides the stimulus for the poet's meditation; his private problems present occasions forexploring universal dilemmas. The poet is repeatedly presented as a quester or pilgrim advancing into the unknown, seeking to understand his place in a mysteriouscosmos. As in many nineteenth-centuryRomantic poems, the passage of time, the role of memory,and the relation of the individual's past to his present and future are dominant themes. Careful examination of Double Dream reveals that Ashbery's modifications of Romantic techniques and ideas are extensions of the modificationswhich Stevens imposed. Most of the nineteenth-century English Romantics and their American transcendentalistcounterpartsvalued the imagination as a unifyingor reconciling power throughwhich man could perceive the unity of his own mind with the divine power governing and infusingnature. The imagination was itselfgod-like, being, in Coleridge's words, "a repetition in the finitemind of the eternal act of creation in the infiniteI AM."22 Stevens' theoryof the imagination involves a shiftin emphasis appropriate to a more thoroughlyskeptical age; forhim what the imagination provides is explicitly a substituteforthe divine, ratherthan a connection with or reenactment 254 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens of divine creation. "Afterone has abandoned a belief in god," Stevens says, "poetry is that essence which takes its place as life's redemption" (OP 158). The role ofthe imaginationis to produce the supreme fictionthat"must take the place /Of emptyheaven and its hymns"(CP 167). Stevens celebrates the artist'sabilityto renew "the fictionof an absolute" (CP 404). In his opinion, "The finalbelief is to believe in a fictionwhich you know to be a fiction,there being nothingelse. The exquisite truthis to know thatit is fictionand that you believe in it willingly" (OP 163). Ashbery,who shares Stevens' skepticism about the existence of any nonfictive ordering ideal, less "willingly" believes in the imagination'sfictivereplacement. Ashbery seems burdened by his consciousness thatall artis a grand "as if,"and thatthe imaginative perception of beauty and order does not necessarily accord with external reality.Though he himself may live according to fictions which assign meaning and impose order, he seems to feel more ambivalence about the fantasticnature of these supports than Stevens does. Mankind, Ashbery states, is simply "fond of plotting itineraries"and "our foreshortenedmemories will keep us going" (DD 31-2). What remains forhim to celebrate is thatmen do keep going, even when theyare conscious that,in fact,"There never was any excuse forthis" (DD 32). While frequentlyundercuttingor mocking imaginative embellishmentofreality,Ashberyacknowledges the need forfictionsthat allow us to feel at home and in control: "But the fantasymakes it ours, a kind of fence-sitting/ Raised to the level of an esthetic ideal" (DD 18). He freely concedes that his aesthetic practices rest on a falsifyingbase, but one which he nonetheless accepts because it tempers harsh experience and helps us in "learning to accept / The charityof the hard moments as they are doled out" (DD 19). Such "fence-sitting"is evident in the volume's attitudestoward language and toward perception in general. The Romantics strove to portraytheir feelings accurately by binding themselves to careful description of their own immediate perceptions. In order to replace received truthswith original and private ones, or at least with original formulations,they looked to the particulars of experience.23Stevens, too, was attuneto the differencebetween "an" and "the" (CP 255). Despite the notable abstractionof his poetry, Stevens sought an "'abstractionblooded" and tried to ground his poetry in observations made "with a clinging eye" (CP 55). Like Lynn Keller 255 Stevens and the Romantics, Ashbery values particularity,but he lacks faith in the mind's ability to hold or convey authentic details. Moreover, the language available to Ashbery is not suited to conveying freshperceptions of the physical world. This is made clear in "Definition of Blue," a mock-academic, and nonetheless serious, statementabout the problems encountered by a post-Romantic post-modernistpoet who is committed to the inherited values of individuality and originality.His society is one in which "mass practices have sought to submerge the personality," and irremediable "'packaging" has "supplanted the old [i.e., immediate, particular]sensations." Moreover, "today there is no point in looking to imaginative new methods / Since all of them are in constant use." The contemporary poet is condemned to work with time-wornlanguage and techniques. But Ashbery affirmsthat this medium can nonetheless contributenot only to the accuracy of art's general portraitof "all being," but also to the understanding of"the exact value" of the individual in his particular time and place: The mostthatcan be said forthem[i.e., the methodsin use] further Is thaterosionproducesa kindofdustor exaggeratedpumice it,becominga medium Whichfillsspace and transforms In whichit is possible to recognizeoneself. (DD 53) Thus the apparently parodic versions of traditionalmotifs-such as those involving quest and pilgrimage, as in "Soonest Mended'"and of traditionallyricforms-such as the cliche aphoristic rhymed couplets of "Some Words" are seriously, as well as mockingly, intended. The element of parody, indicating the author's halfapologetic embarrassment, protects him against charges of sentimentality while allowing him to use these formulae as genuine expressions of his ideas.24 At the same time, "fence-sitting"Ashbery does not abandon his attempts to "make it new" and to cleanse his poetic language of what Shelley termed the "film of familiarity."25For example, in "For JohnClare" Ashbery exploits the resources of prose as a flexible vehicle for creating new effects.The prose is jagged, full of sentence fragmentsand ellipses, but its rhythmsand diction convey the effectof speech idiom: There oughtto be roomformorethings,fora spreadingout, like. Being immersed in the details of rock and field and slope-letting them come to you foronce, and then meeting themhalfwaywould be so mucheasier. (DD 35) 256 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens Casual syntax and colloquial language are mixed with more academic formulationsand vocabulary-"It is possible that finally, like coming to the end of a long, barely perceptible rise, there is a mutual cohesion and interaction"-and with vivid description"The pollarded trees scarcely bucking the wind ... Clabbered sky." Such prose (which Ashberywill explore more fullyin his next volume, Three Poems) has strong affinitieswith Stevens' discursiveness, though Ashbery's mild voice avoids the magisterial tone prevalent in Stevens' late work. Stevens, too, relies heavily on prose rhythms and syntax. Nominative construction-"it is possible that," "there is"-are common also in his poetry. Stevens often uses academic rhetoric,which, though sometimes mockingly presented, nonetheless propounds his own doctrines.26 And of course, as we have noted, Stevens too favorsconditional termssuch as "ought" and "would." Most important,both poets rely on varied voices and varied diction to give authenticity to conglomerates formedfrom"sacked speech" (CP 530). "French Poems" demonstrates a differenttack Ashbery sometimes takes in attemptinglinguistic renewal. As stated in the notes at the end of the volume, he firstwrote these pieces in French and then translated them into English "with the idea of avoiding customaryword-patternsand associations." Though composed in verse lines, the syntax is that of rather elegant prose and the generally lengthy sentences flow smoothly. Yet there is a pronounced unfamiliarity,a foreign aura, in the sentence construction: "But the existence of these things and especially / The amazing fullness of theirnumber must be /For us a source of unforgettablequestions." The similes and explanatory elaborations, though employing concrete terms,are elusive and give a quality of strangeness to familiar words and ordinarysyntax: All kinds of things exist, and, what is more, Specimens of these things, which do not make themselves known. I am speaking of the laugh of the squire and the spur Which are like a hole in the armorof the day. Similar surprising details and unexpected words or constructions appear in many poems which are not translations. The aesthetic and epistemological principles behind Ashbery's idiosyncratic choice of terms and images relate closely to those determining the strange terminology in which Stevens outlines his "mundo." Both poets wish to highlight the mysteriousness to be Lynn Keller 257 found within the ordinaryand banal-"The extreme of the known in the presence of the extreme / Of the unknown" (CP 508). Moreover, both men are attemptingto refineand redefine concepts which have been evolving forcenturies; the oddness of their formulations is a natural outgrowth of their desire for an accuracy which they believe conventional patterns of expression do not achieve. Hence, Ashbery as artcriticreserves his highest praise for those whose work cannot be explained in any terms other than its own,27and repeatedly quotes Stevens' phrase, "a completely new set of objects," as the goal of an artist'screation.28 Having evolved many of his own techniques fromthe works of Stevens, Ashbery since The Double Dream of Spring has diverged increasingly from his modernist mentor. Nonetheless, Stevens' idiom can be heard as an undertone throughoutmuch of Ashbery's later poetry. Moreover, Stevens' desire to represent "the act of the mind" has been the guiding principle forall Ashbery's more recent experiments. The mental process which most interested Stevens, however, was that of the imagination creating a fiction which "mediates between the requirements of desire and the conditions of reality."29Thus, as Vendler has pointed out, In spiteofhis announcedintentto remainthe poet ofreality,to "hasp on the survivingform/Of shall or oughtto be in is," . . . [a]gainand again,[Stevens]foundhimselfseduced awaytowhat oughtto be, forsakingall descriptionand reportingof present and past in favorof the normativeand the optative,the willed and the desired.30 In Ashbery's subsequent volumes it becomes clear that,unlike Stevens whose poetry so often described the world as it ought to be viewed, the contemporarypoet's commitmentis to describing the world as it is and to illustratingthe mysteriousprocesses by which it is apprehended. The Universityof Wisconsin, Madison FOOTNOTES 1 John Ashbery, "A Place for Everything," Art News, 64 (1970), 33, 73. He is discussing the collages of Anne Ryan. 2 Three hundred copies of a volume entitled Turandot and Other Poems were printed by Tiber de Nagy Gallery, New York, in 1953. Almost all of the poems in this volume were reprinted in Some Trees. 3 Parenthetic citations forquoted poems use the following abbreviations to referto the following editions: CP Wallace Stevens, The Collected Poems of Wallace Ste- 258 John Ashbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens vens (New York: Knopf, 1954). OP Wallace Stevens, Opus Posthumous (New York: Knopf, 1957). NA Wallace Stevens, The Necessary Angel: Essays on Reality and the Imagination (New York: Knopf, 1951). ST John Ashbery, Some Trees (New York: Ecco, 1978). RM John Ashbery, Rivers and Mountains (New York: Ecco, 1977). DD John Ashbery, The Double Dream of Spring (New York: Ecco, 1976). TP John Ashbery, Three Poems (New York: Viking, 1972). 4 See CP 152, 178, 197, 269 for examples of Stevens' use of the adjective "fat" to express the potent poet's sensual engagement with reality and his imaginative fecundity. Thinness indicates an alienation fromthe "physical poetry" in which we live and, consequently, imaginative sterility. Thus the "large red man" who reads from the "poem of life" is contrasted with the ghosts whose hearts are "thin" and "spended" (CP 424). Similarly, the men of Haddam who are blind to the richness of their world are characterized as "thin" (CP 93). 5 Helen Vendler, "The Qualified Assertions of Wallace Stevens," The Act of the Mind: Essays on the Poetry of Wallace Stevens, ed. Roy Harvey Pearce and J. Hillis Miller (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1965), p. 163. 6 Helen Vendler, On Extended Wings: Wallace Stevens' Longer Poems (Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press, 1969). p. 13. 7 "The Craft of John Ashbery" (an interview by Louis A. Osti), Confrontations 9 (1974), 88. 8 As Vendler has pointed out, questions are "one of the natural forms in which [Stevens'] mind casts its observations" (On Extended Wings, p. 20); they "serve as a qualified way to put a premise" (p. 18). For examples of Stevens using questions to suggest an argument, see CP 168, 173, 202-203. 9 For example, the closing stanza of "The Ordinary Women" is a repetition of the opening stanza; the last line of "The Worms at Heaven's Gate" repeats the firstline. Variations of phrases repeat in "Anecdote of Men by the Thousand," "Anecdote of the Prince of Peacocks," "Cortege for Rosenbloom," "Valley Candle," and "Domination of Black." 10 The following passages provide examples of Stevens' later use of repetition: A tune beyond us as we are, Yet nothing changed by the blue guitar; Ourselves in the tune as if in space, Yet nothing changed, except the place Of things as they are and only the place As you play them, on the blue guitar, Placed, so, beyond the compass of change. It is possible that to seem-it is to be, As the sun is something seeming and it is. The sun is an example. What it seems It is and in such seeming all things are. Thus things are like a seeming of the sun Or like a seeming of the moon or night Or sleep. It is a queen that made it seem By the illustrations nothing of her name. Her green mind made the world around her green. The queen is an example .. . This green queen In the seeming of the summer of her sun By her own seeming made the summer change. Lynn Keller (CP 167-168) (CP 339) 259 11 At no point do I intend to imply that Stevens is the only significant influence on Ashbery's work. In the poems of Rivers and Mountains, forinstance, the influences of Mallarme, Valery, Baudelaire, and Eliot (particulary Four Quartets) can often be detected. For discussions of these and other influences see David Shapiro, John Ashbery: An Introduction to the Poetry (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1979). 12 Contemporary Poets of the English Language, ed. Rosalie Murphy (Chicago: St. James Press, 1971), p. 33. 13 Contemporary Poets of the English Language, p. 33. 14 Many earlier English poets, including Milton, Wordsworth, and Tennyson, have skillfully employed extended syntax. Stevens, however, is unquestionably the master of syntactical extension in his own generation, and both his methods and motives seem especially close to Ashbery's. 15 The interdependence and ultimate unity of opposites is a recurrent motif in Stevens; see, forinstance, CP 215-216, 392. On p. 37 of On Extended Wings, Vendler points out that Stevens, attached to "paradoxical logic," deceptively employs the language of logical discrimination, not to distinguish, but to identify different or alternative categories with each other. 16 See Ashbery's discussion of the autobiographical aspect of this poem in "Craft Interview with John Ashbery," The Craft of Poetry: Interviews from the New York Quarterly, ed. William Packard (Garden City: Doubleday, 1974), pp. 119 and 123. 17 Bernard Heringman lists Stevens' "stock symbols" as follows: "The moon, blue, the polar north,winter, music, poetry and all art: these consistently referto the realm of the imagination, order, the ideal. The sun, yellow, the tropic south, summer, physical nature: these refer to, or symbolize, the realm of reality, disorder, the actual" ("Wallace Stevens: The Use of Poetry," The Act of the Mind, p. 1). For furtherdiscussion of Stevens' symbolism and his seasonal cycle, see Frank Kermode, Wallace Stevens (London: Oliver & Boyd, 1960), pp. 34-37; Richard Macksey, "The Climates of Wallace Stevens," The Act of the Mind; pp. 185-223; Northrop Frye, "The Realistic Oriole: A Study of Wallace Stevens," Wallace Stevens: A Collection of Critical Essays ed. Marie Borroff(Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1963) pp. 161-176. "I I am following Harold Bloom in using these two quotations to compare the two poets. See "John Ashbery: The Charity of the Hard Moments," Salmagundi 22-23 (1973), 112. In that article Bloom presents Ashbery as a descendent of Emerson and of the English Romantics, thereby identifyingthe Romantic roots on which I focus in discussing Double Dream. 19Originality is an important standard which Ashbery applies not only to his own work but also, as an art critic, to that of other artists. For a few examples, see "American Sanctuary in Paris," Art News Annual, 31 (1966), 164; "Can Art be Excellent if Anybody Could Do It?" New York Herald Tribune, (Paris), 8 Nov. 1961, p. 11; "Poet-Painter Reflects Self in Paris Show," New York Herald Tribune (Paris), 16 Feb. 1965, p. 5. 20 Robert Pinsky, The Situation of Poetry: Contemporary Poetry and Its Traditions (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1976), p. 47. 21 Pinsky, p. 61. 22 S. T. Coleridge, Biographica Literaria, ed. J. Shawcross (London: Oxford Univ. Press, 1907, rpt. 1973) I, 202. 23 As Robert Langbaum has pointed out in The Poetry of Experience (New York: Norton, 1957), "the romanticist's formulation is evolved out of experience and is continually tested against experience" (p. 22). He states that Romanticism "is essentially a doctrine of experience, an attempt to salvage on science's own empiric grounds the validity of individual perception against scientific abstractions" (p. 27). 24 See Pinsky's discussion of Berryman, especially pp. 25, 36-37. 25 P. B. Shelley, "A Defense of Poetry," English Romantic Writers, ed. David 260 JohnAshbery's Evolving Debt to Wallace Stevens Perkins (New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1967), p. 1085. For a discussion of the Romantics' opposition to "custom" in both perception and poetic language, see M. H. Abrams, Natural Supernaturalism: Tradition and Revolution in Romantic Literature (New York: Norton, 1971), pp. 377-384. 26 Dry academic rhetoric is particularly prevalent in Parts of a World. See, for example, "Prelude to Objects" (CP 194), "Connoisseur of Chaos" (CP 215-216), "Extracts from Addresses to the Academy of Fine Ideas" (CP 252-259). 27 For example, discussing the work of Brice Marden ("Grey Eminence," Art News, 71 [1972], 64), Ashbery said, "To create a work of art that the critic cannot even begin to talk about ought to be the artist's chief concern; Marden has achieved it." Reviewing an exhibit of work by Jasper Johns ("Brooms and Prisms," Art News, 65 [1966], 58), Ashbery remarked, "Johns is one of the few young painters of today whose work seems to defy critical analysis, and this is precisely a sign of its power-it can't be explained in any other terms than its own, and is therefore necessary." Analyzing why "the 20th century, whatever else it may be, is the century of Matisse, Picasso, and Gertrude Stein," and why the adventurous works of Stein and Picasso remain so tremendously exciting, Ashbery says, "Both Picasso and Gertude Stein manage to escape critical judgment by working in a climate where it simply could not exist. Picasso sets up new forms whose newness protects them from criticism: there are no standards by which to judge them except the painter's own as gleaned from other works by him" ("G. M. P.," Art News, 69, [1971]), 46, 74. 28 See, for example, "Brooms and Prisms," p. 58 and "Willem de Kooning," Art News Annual, 37 (1971), 26. 29 Ronald Sukenick, Wallace Stevens: Musing the Obscure (New York: New York Univ. Press, 1967), p. 3. 30 Vendler, On Extended Wings, p. 21. Lynn Keller 261