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The Idea of Order at Key West

Poem by Wallace Stevens


Poem by Wallace Stevens

History and context

"The Idea of Order at Key West" takes place on the island Key West in the state of Florida. Though the island was mostly isolated before the 1900s, its military post and the creation of a rail route to the mainland led to an increase in population and tourists. Many literary artists such as Ernest Hemingway and Robert Frost frequented Key West and drew inspiration from its environment; among them was Stevens, who met the two men on different occasions. As with many other poems of Stevens', "The Idea of Order at Key West" introduces dissonance between reality and perception. A common theme throughout his poems examines imagination and the concept of creating art.

Summary

Analysis

Similar to many of his other poems, "The Idea of Order at Key West" is philosophically complex. Stated by critics as "perhaps impossible to interpret fully", the poem "affirms a transcendental poetic spirit yet cannot locate it". One critic has deemed the poem as "desperately" ambiguous, containing unresolvable difficulties. The ambiguity of ideas did not reflect Stevens' confusion or unease with ideas, but rather fostered interpretation by suggesting that the idea of order could not be raised without "the specter of disorder". The deconstruction of people and nature allows for an artistic interpretation of the poem. Jay Parini, who in 2011 ranked the poem second only to Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself" among all American poems ever written, interprets it as "[celebrating] the 'blessed rage for order' at the heart of all creative work."

The core of the poem lies on the interdependence of imagination and reality. Stevens stresses the "essential discontinuity between them" and emphasizes their differences by "demonstrating the vain struggle of the imagination 'to grasp what it beholds in a single version of it". This interpretation is remarkable because in the same collection of poems, Ideas of Order, Stevens "interrogates this ordering imagination with skepticism" yet celebrates it in "The Idea of Order at Key West".

Though the majority of the poem focuses on the woman singer and the song, the narrator and his friend also participate in the creation of art: through his narration itself and through its effects on him which transforms his perception of reality. The narrator uses the woman's song to help himself reconstruct a world of his own reality from the chaos of the "water [that] never formed to mind or voice". Perhaps she is the creative spirit of the island itself; the muse that brings order to the chaos of the wind, and the sea, and to creativity.

Notes

References

References

  1. [http://www.nationalbook.org/nba1955.html#.T6dBocVdC1cLink National Book Award – 1955] {{webarchive. link. (19 January 2013 . National Book Foundation. Retrieved 6 May 2012.)
  2. Haskell, Arlo. [http://www.kwls.org/littoral/ernest_hemingway_knocked_walla/ Hemingway Knocked Wallace Stevens into a Puddle and Bragged About It] {{webarchive. link. (21 July 2011 , a 20 March 2008 article from the website of the [[Key West Literary Seminar]].)
  3. Haskell, Arlo. [http://www.kwls.org/littoral/post_11/ The Trouble with Robert Frost and Wallace Stevens] {{webarchive. link. (21 July 2011 , a 14 April 2009 article from the website of the [[Key West Literary Seminar]].)
  4. link. (8 July 2018 , p.104. Cornell University Press, 1980.)
  5. link. (8 July 2018 , p.93. Cornell University Press, 1980.)
  6. Longenbach, James.[http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/s_z/stevens/keywest.htm On "The Idea of Order at Key West"] {{webarchive. link. (15 June 2011 .)
  7. [[Mutlu Konuk Blasing. Blasing, Mutlu Konuk]]. [http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/s_z/stevens/keywest.htm On "The Idea of Order at Key West"] {{webarchive. link. (15 June 2011 .)
  8. Parini, Jay. (11 March 2011). "The 10 best American poems". The Guardian.
  9. Voros, Gyorgyi. [http://www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/s_z/stevens/keywest.htm On "The Idea of Order at Key West"] {{webarchive. link. (15 June 2011 .)
  10. link. (8 July 2018 , p.30. Sussex Academic Press, 2006.)
  11. link. (8 July 2018 , p.36. Sussex Academic Press, 2006.)
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