No Possum, No Sop, No Taters
No Possum, No Sop, No Taters - context Summary
Published in Auroras of Autumn
Published in 1950 in Wallace Stevens’s Auroras of Autumn, this late-period poem frames a stark January landscape to stage reflections on absence, harsh perception, and a difficult moral clarity. The frozen field, sparring crows, and spare language produce a tonal austerity that condenses experience into a single "emptiness" and a paradoxical "last purity" of knowing good within bad. It reads as a mature meditation on perception and ethics.
Read Complete AnalysesHe is not here, the old sun, As absent as if we were asleep. The field is frozen. The leaves are dry. Bad is final in this light. In this bleak air the broken stalks Have arms without hands. They have trunks Without legs or, for that, without heads. They have heads in which a captive cry Is merely the moving of a tongue. Snow sparkles like eyesight falling to earth, Like seeing fallen brightly away. The leaves hop, scraping on the ground. It is deep January. The sky is hard. The stalks are firmly rooted in ice. It is in this solitude, a syllable, Out of these gawky flitterings, Intones its single emptiness, The savagest hollow of winter-sound. It is here, in this bad, that we reach The last purity of the knowledge of good. The crow looks rusty as he rises up. Bright is the malice in his eye... One joins him there for company, But at a distance, in another tree.
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