Wallace Stevens

Large Red Man Reading

Large Red Man Reading - context Summary

From 1950 Collection

Published in Wallace Stevens’ 1950 collection The Auroras of Autumn, "Large Red Man Reading" presents an image of a reader whose aloud phrases summon ghostly listeners. The poem contrasts the transcendent language of the "purple tabulae" with ordinary household objects and the poem of life, suggesting how poetic utterance restores feeling and shape to diminished hearts. It occupies Stevens’ late-career concern with imagination’s power to remake reality.

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There were ghosts that returned to earth to hear his phrases, As he sat there reading, aloud, the great blue tabulae. They were those from the wilderness of stars that had expected more. There were those that returned to hear him read from the poem of life, Of the pans above the stove, the pots on the table, the tulips among them. They were those that would have wept to step barefoot into reality, That would have wept and been happy, have shivered in the frost And cried out to feel it again, have run fingers over leaves And against the most coiled thorn, have seized on what was ugly And laughed, as he sat there reading, from out of the purple tabulae, The outlines of being and its expressings, the syllables of its law: Poesis, poesis, the literal characters, the vatic lines, Which in those ears and in those thin, those spended hearts, Took on color, took on shape and the size of things as they are And spoke the feeling for them, which was what they had lacked.

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