Filreis, Alan2023-05-232023-05-232009-10-012010-01-29https://repository.upenn.edu/handle/20.500.14332/43448Three poems by Stevens indicate a particular aesthetic predicament, expressions of near-cessation: "Mozart, 1935," "The Man with the Blue Guitar," and "The Plain Sense of Things." In the third poem, the imagination re-emerges at precisely the point of its termination. In the second, the poet ventures into pure sound just when an ideological model for the poem collapses. In the first, the poem is the result of a dodge on the matter of others' pain.poetrypoeticsWallace Stevensmodernismsound poetryLiterature in English, North AmericaSelecting Three Poems by W. Stevens: A Roundtable DiscussionArticle