The Worms At Heaven's Gate
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"The Worms at Heaven's Gate" is a poem from
Wallace Stevens Wallace Stevens (October 2, 1879 – August 2, 1955) was an American modernist poet. He was born in Reading, Pennsylvania, educated at Harvard and then New York Law School, and spent most of his life working as an executive for an insurance compa ...
' first book of poetry, ''
Harmonium The pump organ is a type of free-reed organ that generates sound as air flows past a vibrating piece of thin metal in a frame. The piece of metal is called a reed. Specific types of pump organ include the reed organ, harmonium, and melodeon. Th ...
'' (1923). It was first published in 1916Buttel, p. 188. and is therefore in the public domain.


Interpretation

Badroulbadour Badroulbadour / Badr ul-Badour / Badr al-Badur ( ar, بدر البدور ', "full moon of full moons") is a princess whom Aladdin married in ''The Story of Aladdin; or, the Wonderful Lamp''. Her name uses the full moon as a metaphor for female beau ...
was a princess married to Aladdin in a fairytale from '' One Thousand and One Nights''. The mention of Heaven's Gate identifies the poem as a commentary on the resurrection of the flesh. Robert Buttel sees the poem as a specimen of Stevens' "grotesque strain" and wryly observes that "it would be difficult to find a more unique funeral procession in literature". He credits William Carlos Williams for improving the line "Within our bellies, we her chariot." from the original "Within our bellies, as a chariot." The overall impression is at once macabre and archly humorous. Thoughts of death and decay are secondary to the sound of 'Badroulbadour', the verb 'decline', and the poem's syntactic architecture. But in essence the poem conveys a sense of the transient nature of beauty. For another perspective on this transience see " Peter Quince at the Clavier". The poem may be compared to " Anecdote of Canna", which describes a unique terrace stroll, and to " Of Heaven Considered as a Tomb", which speculates on the other side of death. Attending to the blank-verse syntax, Buttel compares the poem to '' Infanta Marina'' for the delicacy of its rhythm, to which it adds the insistent rhythms of a funeral procession. (See also '' Cortege for Rosenbloom''.) Out of the tomb, we bring Badroulbadour; Then in lines three and four, Here is an eye. And here are, one by one,
The lashes of that eye and its white lid. Buttel continues:
e reversed initial foot and the following caesura help draw specific attention to the eye; the following three iambic feet maintain the pace of the procession; and the spondees on `that eye' and `white lid' substantiate the reflective consideration of Badroulbadour's exquisite beauty. In the next-to-last line of the poem, Stevens did not hesitate to give full stress to the three main words and let very light accents fall on the preposition and conjunction: The bundle of the body and the feet. It was important to hasten over the merely physical attributes of the princess, and the metrical telescoping of the line fits that intention without disturbing the processional rhythm.
The poem surely adds a wry layer of meaning to Stevens' epigram in ''Adagia,'' "The poet makes silk dresses out of worms."Kermode, p. 900.


Notes


See also

*" Frogs Eat Butterflies. Snakes Eat Frogs. Hogs Eat Snakes. Men Eat Hogs" (poem)


References

* Buttel, R. ''Wallace Stevens: The Making of Harmonium''. 1968: Princeton University Press. * Kermode, Frank and Joan Richardson, eds. ''Stevens: Collected Poetry & Prose''. 1997: The Library of America.


External links


"Worms at Heaven's Gate"
• MP3 audio recording in the public domain (MP3)—read by other than Wallace Stevens
{{DEFAULTSORT:Worms at Heaven's Gate 1916 poems American poems Poetry by Wallace Stevens