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Wednesday, 3 May 2017

Discuss major themes in Ashbury’s poetry with reference to the poems in syllabus?

Poet and critic, who has deeply influenced American poetry from the 1970s. Ashbery is the best-known poet of the "New York School." His work is characterized by originality, impressionistic elegance, and dark themes of death and terror as evidenced by his lines, ‘The locking into place is death’. In the 1950s Ashbery adopted to his poetry techniques used by such abstract painters as Willem Kooning and Jackson Pollock.
In 'The Painter', we see surrealistic techniques employed. He also was interested in the music of John Cage and his poem, ‘Melodic Trains’ has been written in a musical-musing style. Charles Altieri, in ‘Self and Sensibility in Contemporary American Poetry’, labels Ashbery “the major poet of our minor age”. Ashbery himself commented in ‘The Invisible Avant-Garde’, that “Artists are no fun once they have been discovered” and it seems that his poetry is an attempt to elude what Eliot called “the lemon squeezing school of criticism”. The main purpose of Ashbery’s poetry as Ashbery himself asserted is:
"to record a kind of generalized transcript of what's really going on in our minds all day "
The best example is ‘Melodic Trains’ which is innovative and based on stream of consciousness technique recording a real transcript of our minds. Elusiveness perhaps best describes Ashbery’s poetry. His poems are difficult reading for those weaned in the early 20th century poetry. Landscapes dominate Ashbery’s poems. His pictures are always laid against the backdrops of vast landscapes, as the train is against the photomural of the Alps in Melodic Trains. Ashbery often writes by assuming a persona i.e. a character who narrates the story but who is distinctly not the poet. As a result we have many different personalities talking to us in his poetry and none of them can be confidently attributed to the poet himself. We have a good example of this in the traveler in a tweed coat and holding a briar pipe in Melodic Trains who may be Ashbery but he is soon lost in a multitude. By assuming this persona, Ashbery is able to bring in all the social voices he needs to paint the landscape of experience in American society. Ashbery substantiated this when he said. “Poetry includes anything and everything”. It is very difficult to categorize either Ashbery himself or his poems. Though Ashbery is a 20th Century Post-modernist yet we find so much diversity in respect of his technique and subject-matter that at one end, he seems classic like Elizabethans and at another, he seems much like romanticists such as Wordsworth and Coleridge. But I think he is best reserved for his avant-garde approach as asserted in the following lines from ‘The Painter’:
“How could he explain to them his prayer/ That nature, not art, might usurp the canvas?”
Another technique used by Ashbery is to echo other poets, to borrow their style, phrases or images to establish a link or to draw an ironical relation between their and his point of view. He has been known to echo Stevens, Eliot, Pound, and the Romantics. As David Perkins points out in On Ashbery’s Predecessors “for both Stevens and Ashbery the imagination creates, destroys and immediately creates another vision of reality”. We see this in ‘The Painter’ where the version of reality of the sea cannot be conveyed in paints and the artist needs a different medium to do that while his concern is that nature and not art might usurp the canvas. Sometimes Ashbery uses voices of other poets. David Perkins points out “he adopts or alludes to a style in order to invoke the tone of feeling associated with it….he exhibits the modern colloquial voices of different types of people”. ‘The Painter’ thus seems to be a direct echo from Browning’s many poems on the subject of art. We have echoes here of ‘Fra Lippo Lippi’ when the protagonist was criticized for finding his subjects in real life and was asked to make his portraits reflect the soul and not the body. Ashbery’s subjects are “not doings in the world but in the mind”. In Melodic Trains the journey exists in the poet’s mind and he mingles humour with pathos, resignation with hope, and maintains his relaxed, and wonderfully imaginative, speech despite premises that might have led to despair. The anguish of the passengers of the train is shared by the poet but their anxiety and “dogged impatience lead the poet to say:
“These figures leaving/The platform or waiting to board the train are my brothers….”
Ashbery’s poetry brings us to strange metaphors and shifts in descriptions. The clouds of smoke in Melodic Trains are ‘wearying and world weary’ and look like ‘great white apples’. The tweed coat with its pattern is likened to ‘date-coloured Sierras’ while the lines of seams plunge into ‘unfathomable Valleys’. The figures may not always be this difficult as the anxiety-laden passengers on the platform look like Tower of Pisa figures though their ‘dogged impatience’ makes them look like determined birds ‘banking forward into the wind’. In The Painter, the artist chooses his wife as a subject and makes her “vast like ruined buildings”. Music is another quality of Ashbery’s poetry. The optimistic tone of his poetry makes even trains to be melodic. Melodic Trains describes the anguish and anxiety of the journey in musical notes which end at a fanfare of celebration with music of human voices and clapping and all that.
Finally, John Ashbery is a modern poet who addresses the sensibility of the modern 201st century contemporary man. Themes like music, rebellion, art, consciousness and the habit of wrapping lines into paragraph-like stanza (which penetrate layer after layer deeper into anxieties, doubts, and false beliefs) is a recent invention. He is a craftsman like classicists and imaginative like romanticists and renowned for his simple colloquial diction. His metaphors are sometimes highly metaphysical and his poetry has a natural flow, varying in sound and effect according to the theme. All these make Ashbery a post-modern poet and establish him as a poet on sure foundations of contemporary American poetry.

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