| LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Monday 30 October: poetry: Denise Levertov, "The Jacob's Ladder," N 2708 poetry reader / discussion leader: Cindy L. Goodson Denise
Levertov
(1923-1997) Biographical
Information:
Accomplishments: Wrote and published 20 books of
poetry, criticism, translations, and also edited several anthologies Her awards include: - Shelley Memorial Award - Robert Frost Medal - The Lenore Marshall Prize - The Lannan Award - The Guggenheim Fellowship and
National Institute of Arts and Letters grant. Her mother’s family descended
from Welsh Tailor and mystic Angel Jones of Mold who was known for stitching his
meditations into his garments. Levertov would eventually become Roman Catholic;
thus, giving her a solid religious foundation from which to create her poetry.
Her writing was strongly influenced by William Carlos Williams as she
embraced his interest in an organic poetic form.
Even though Levertov is 100 years after the
Transcendentalists, you can still see a fair bit of Transcendentalism in the
poem ‘The Jacob’s Ladder’. Her
poetry often presents minute observations of everyday life and permeates
commonplace objects with personal and religious significance.
Levertov has frequently
expressed her understanding of the poet's vocation in language borrowed from
spiritual or religious discourse. Reacting to the turbulent events of the
1960s, she began to use her poetry to explain and support her actions as a
political activist, with her most strident poetry being directed against the
actions of the U.S. military in the Vietnam War. The
Jacob’s Ladder- Page 2708 My
Interpretation: The poem is based on a
scripture from the Bible in Genesis 28:12-15. This scripture describes a ladder
in Jacob’s dream, which reaches from earth to heaven, and the angels of God
are ascending and descending on it. Through his vision, God appears declaring to Jacob the future
of his descendants or a confirmation of the Abrahamic Covenant to him.
“And thy
seed shall be as the dust of the earth…” (Gen. 28:14)
During the dream, God explains to him that He is always with him.
When Jacob woke up he dedicated himself to God and Bethel becomes a
significant place in Scripture because Jacob changed the name of the place from
Luz to Beth-el (28:19) The poem follows Objective 1a,
the romance narrative--describing a quest or journey toward
transcendence. She features precise
imagery using both sublime and gothic expressions and subjects drawn from
everyday life, often recognizing and celebrating the spiritual qualities of
domestic situations. She
follows the life of a man who is on a journey to a greater place and at the end
he, “The poem ascends.” This
can be viewed as the result of one not swift of strong but one who endured till
the end. 1st
Stanza: The
writer begins with what the stairway is not. It is not “a thing of gleaming
strands/a radiant evanescence” I
believe she’s saying that life is not as simple as suggested in the Genesis
version of Jacob’s Ladder. She
combines her organic form of writing, letting the reader know she fully
understands the Bible’s version of Jacob’s Ladder, but says, “consider
this…” and she sort of puts a spin on the whole ladder thing and combines it
with the alternative rosy stone paved road which is to me romantic because it
expresses the sublime: Beauty, hope, optimism.
“All roads lead to Rome.” The
fact that Jacob dreams of this ladder that reaches from the earth into heaven is
a romantic theme because the Bible’s premise is that the children of Israel
hope for redemption and through this redeemer they will live forever in glory
according to the promises of God. A
‘getting to glory’ mindset is a crossing over for believers and the ladder
represents that crossing of physical borders in order to attain the transcendent
goal or dream; heaven. 2nd
Stanza:
“It is of stone.” Stone is a
symbol of solidity and beauty; diamonds are stones. She’s
replacing the ladder with the stone.
There’s a sense of optimism; representative of hope in the future. “A rosy stone that takes a glowing tone of softness” the
stones are used metaphorically to represent the stoned-paved streets. In Rome
cut stones where the first smooth roads; All roads lead to Rome. This connection to Rome, is probably a result of her
religious affiliation with the Roman Catholic Church so she would have studied
this history. Behind
is the sky with a night gray color – man looks to the past and has doubts.
For her, she hated the wars. If
you’re on the ladder you can’t look back. Gothic
color scheme – night gray give depicts of a state of melancholy – could be a
considered a romantic spirit. “It is a stone…” This
could represent the word from God. It is of stone, it’s solid, reliable, dependable the Bible
is considered the road map to life. “Rosy”
signifies love, sacrifice, and blood – sublime expressions of beauty and pain
= Jesus the cross 3rd
Stanza: “Sharp
angels,” represent the trials of life, things don’t always go as planned,
still optimism present in her. Things
are not always as they appear. 1841
Emerson’s (Self-Reliance) ref ships – the voyage of the best ship is a
zig-zag. A line of hundreds tacks. A
glance from a sufficient distance gives the appearance of a straight line but
the actual navigators. 4th
Stanza: I
see clearly the connection between Levertov and Emerson through his influence of
her use of imagery. She recognized
Emerson's influence on her thoughts on organic poetry. She quotes him as saying,
"This insight which expressed itself by what is called Imagination does not
come by study, but by the intellect being where and what it sees, by sharing the
path or circuit of things through forms, and so making it translucent to
others" “Must
scrape his knees” - We overcome
obstacles and achieve higher levels but we get bumps and bruises along the way. “Cut
stone console his groping feet” – road to accomplishment; reaching a
destination; again the cut stones could represent diamonds or wealth.
The wings of the angels represent the strength of the Lord, which God
promised to Jacob in the vision. “The
poem ascends” - Man is like a poem to her.
He succeeds. We see things
the way we see them and have interpretations, others see things the way they see
them and interpret them. A poet
sees things and creates poems out of them.
The life and journey of a man is represented through romantic expressions Q1.
How is Levertov’s romantic style similar to other American writers in
our selections? Q2.
What some thoughts on the rhythm and words and sounds?
Stone, tone, glowing, only (2nd stanza).
Q3.
What are some of the mystical
and transcendental attributes of the poem?
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