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Earthy Anecdote (poem)

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"Earthy Anecdote" is the first poem in Wallace Stevens' first book of poetry Harmonium (1923). The passage of a group of "bucks" is impeded by a "firecat".

This initial poem of Stevens' canon has caused consternation among critics. According to Martha Strom, "Stevens locates the bucks in Oklahoma, which firmly situates the poem in the 'local' school of writing, but he imbues the localist donnée—a particular landscape, some bucks, and a cat in Oklahoma—with the motion of his imagination, and the flat 'local' scene acquires texture and life". When Stevens was a student at Harvard he was interested in the local-color-movement in American writing, but that interest grew into a life-long philosophical study of imagination and reality and how their intersection could lead to poetry. And those terms are ones that apply more usefully to "Earthy Anecdote" than "local color".

References

Earthy Anecdote (poem) Wikipedia


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