Modern American Poetry
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233 One turns with something like ferocity toward a land that one loves, to which one is really and essentially native, to deman ...
(^234) Eleanor Cook enlarged and yet no more than itself, transfigured and yet beyond the need of transfiguration.”^1 It is hard ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 235 obviousness of Stevens’ language for his methods. Here Stevens achieves the seemingly i ...
(^236) Eleanor Cook of prepositions than any three lines I know. They challenge and establish different senses of place: As if h ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 237 Among the second selves, sailor, observe The rioter that appears when things are change ...
(^238) Eleanor Cook in “St. Armorer’s was once an immense success, / It rose loftily and stood massively” (CP529). The tone make ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 239 all. Venus has mostly vanished, though there is “a mother with vague severed arms” (CP4 ...
(^240) Eleanor Cook Châtillon is, I think, a family name, or at least a desired family name, for Stevens liked the thought that ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 241 his future wife,^10 and also as Ariel, a figure who enters his poetry only late in life ...
(^242) Eleanor Cook unidentified but he is related, and somehow through the Order of the Knights of the Rose. The Pastor Caballe ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 243 expatriates yet retain under their cosmopolitanism a deep Spanishness—the sense ‘that i ...
(^244) Eleanor Cook Of right joining, a music of ideas, the burning And breeding and bearing birth of harmony, The final relatio ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 245 reflection to imply that we only see on or into water when it is still: “Fish in the un ...
(^246) Eleanor Cook constant. Doubleness that is not quite the same is felt differently by a twenty- eight-year-old looking back ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 247 They do seem to return to the same orbits as they pass and then pass again, with “pass- ...
(^248) Eleanor Cook unclear. The play with the dove is like Joyce but the effects are Stevens’ own, and finely controlled as the ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 249 The series “chorister,” “choir,” “choral,” is a little insistent, again because of memo ...
(^250) Eleanor Cook is contained in its words or its leaves, and vice versa; it also isits words or leaves. So also space is con ...
Late Poems: Places, Common and Other 251 Beech Tree Books, 1986), vol. 1, p. 349. “Look for me in Sacred Pagodas,” Stevens wrote ...
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