The Weeping Burgher
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"The Weeping Burgher" is a poem from Wallace Stevens's first book of poetry, Harmonium. It was originally published in 1919, so it is in the public domain.[1]
The Weeping Burgher
It is with a strange malice Ah! that ill humors The sorry verities! Permit that if as ghost I come And I, then, tortured for old speech, |
Stevens confesses to a strange malice that distorts the world as given by the poems in Harmonium, masking ill humors and poses. The masks are excesses that are his poetic cure for sorrow. The poet makes himself present to the reader as a ghost of himself, but an appealingly foppish ghost of "belle design", quite different from the weeping burgher who crafted the artifice. The poem immediately follows "The place of the solitaires", with which it may be instructively compared. The hands that do the writing are now seen as "sharp, imagined things" responsible for strangely malicious distortions.
Bates recounts the following anecdote.
Two years after "The Weeping Burgher" appeared in [the journal] Poetry, Genevieve Taggard told Stevens of the rumor that his poems were "hideous ghosts" of himself, to which he replied, "It may be."[2]
See Marianne Moore's comment about the "shadow of acrimonious, unprovoked contumely" that she detected in Harmonium.
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Bates, Milton. Wallace Stevens: A Mythology of Self. 1985: University of California Press.