Since the dawn of time, writers—especially poets—have tried to present to their audiences the essence of a thing or a feeling. They do this in a variety of ways. The American writer Gertrude Stein, for example, worked with repetition in her prose and famously claimed that in her line “Rose is a rose is a rose” “the rose is red for the first time in English poetry for a hundred years.” She took a different approach in Tender Buttons, offering what has been called verbal cubism and attempting with sound and rhythm to examine objects, rooms, and food. While not always successful, it is excellent fun to read aloud to the like-minded. Wallace Stevens too in his poem “13 Ways of Looking a Blackbird” takes the position that essence can be derived from several perspectives.
We wanted to rise to the challenge. Like Stevens's poem, but not half so brilliantly, this feature will examine a “blackbird” from different perspectives. It is impressionistic. The subject is not always a blackbird.