SETTING THE TABLE FOR THE
BUTTONS BOX
THE BOOK
..........................-
TENDER
BUTTONS
THE SUBBOOK
...................-
OBJECTS
SUBPOEM:
……...................-
A CLOTH: NUMBER 22
STANZAS..............................-
1
WORD
COUNT.....................- 33
SUBPOEM:
……...................-
MORE: NUMBER 23
STANZA................................-
2
WORD
COUNT.....................- 52
CO-LEADER.........................-
THE STEINY ROAD POET
CO-LEADER.........................-
DAVE GREEN
CO-LLABORATORS..............-
MODPO STUDENTS/THE BUTTONS
GENRE..................................-
VIRTUAL OPERA
LOCATION............................-USA,
UK, Australia, Philippines, S. Africa, Canada.
TIME......................................-
ALL HOURS OF EARTH’S CLOCK
TONE.....................................-
EXPECTANT & FESTIVE
A CLOTH.
Enough cloth is plenty and more, more
is almost enough for that and besides if there is no more spreading is there
plenty of room for it. Any occasion shows the best way.
MORE.
An elegant use of foliage and grace and
a little piece of white cloth and oil.
Wondering so winningly in several kinds
of oceans is the reason that makes red so regular and enthusiastic. The reason
that there is more snips are the same shining very colored rid of no round
color.
Dear Reader,
Welcome to the latest
installment of our close readings of Gertrude Stein's Tender Buttons
poems. We are an amateur group of Stein aficionados known affectionately as the
Buttons. We enjoy reading and analyzing poetry as a group and having fun in the
process. And we do have a lot of fun in the process, even approaching or
entering party mode at times, but we work hard at understanding the poems as
well. I am Dave Green, your guest blogger for this set of poems.
TABLECLOTHS & CENTERPIECES
TABLECLOTHS & CENTERPIECES
Buttons member Barbara
Crary kicked off the discussion by saying that she saw the cloth in
"A Cloth." as a tablecloth covering the table where Gertrude set her
objects when writing about them. She added that the first stanza of
"More." suggests a centerpiece for a festive occasion. Delving
more deeply into the text, she said she liked the alliteration and sound
of Wondering so winningly. Judy Meibach agreed. Finally, Barbara mentioned that occasion in
the first poem perhaps morphs into or is somehow connected to oceans in
the second.
Given this sketch of a possible mise-en-scene, Claudia Schumann promptly produced images of occasional tables that could have be found in a home at the turn of the century. She imagined such a table with a doily and a centerpiece object sitting on it. The Buttons suddenly felt themselves transported to the time in question.
THE BIRTH OF VENUS
The Steiny Road Poet then
offered the view that both poems could be related to painting. Enough cloth could
be a drape around an artist's model. And foliage could be a fig
leaf for a nude subject. Then, in a self-described fit of going
"bonkers", she posited that "More." could be a reference to
Botticelli's The Birth of Venus, citing as support the word oceans and
Venus' red hair that she uses as a fig leaf to hide her nakedness.
Steiny said she was certain that Gertrude and Alice had seen that painting at
the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.
Allan Keeton nodded his
head at Steiny's painterly ruminations and noted that Venus is clearly wondering
so winningly in several kinds of oceans. As a bonus, he went on to explain
some of the mythology behind the painting, including the fascinating point that
Venus was generated out of the foam of blood and semen from Uranus' severed
genitals. Intrigued, Peter Treanor inspected the painting closely for said
genitals but came up empty.
SAILBOATS
Meanwhile, the
Botticellian cloths billowing in the wind reminded Eleanor Smagarinksy of sails
on a sailboat. So perhaps the issue in "A Cloth." is: how do you
decide on the size of your sail? By the strength of the wind? By your
direction? Destination? Size of the boat? Number of passengers? Any occasion
[ocean] shows the best way - does the sea show you the best
direction and determine how you should set the sails? Finally, the seafaring
Eleanor noted that the wind has no color, which ties nicely with the phrase Of
no round color.
PAINTING AGAIN
Dave (your author) made his entrance at this point, taking up the painterly line of attack again and wondering if the reference to red in several kinds of oceans could be pointing to paintings by different artists, e.g., red in Matisse, red in Picasso. Is Gertrude looking at her paintings on the wall above a covered table in her apartment? The cloth decorates the table and the paintings decorate the wall? Could snips refer to brushstrokes? Eleanor replied that canvas is indeed a type of cloth. Peter added that the oil could be paint and perhaps foliage is greenery included in the painting.
Dave (your author) made his entrance at this point, taking up the painterly line of attack again and wondering if the reference to red in several kinds of oceans could be pointing to paintings by different artists, e.g., red in Matisse, red in Picasso. Is Gertrude looking at her paintings on the wall above a covered table in her apartment? The cloth decorates the table and the paintings decorate the wall? Could snips refer to brushstrokes? Eleanor replied that canvas is indeed a type of cloth. Peter added that the oil could be paint and perhaps foliage is greenery included in the painting.
SNIPS AS SHIPS
Dave added that snips also
reminded him of ships, given the prior mention of oceans. This ties in
with Eleanor's sailboat. Eleanor delightedly noted that the only difference
between snips and "ships" is the tiny snip that makes an
"h" into an "n". Whereupon Peter exclaimed, it's had its
topsail cut off! Or lowered. Too windy perhaps. This caused Eleanor to laugh so
loudly that she woke up her entire neighborhood. Recovering her composure, a
thought occurred to her--oil floats on water. More possible evidence for
a flotation theme.
HOW MUCH CLOTH IS ENOUGH?
Dave then took a bead on
"A Cloth." and, feeling ambitious, attempted a complete
paraphrase: To have the right amount of cloth
for a table, you need to have plenty of cloth and actually more than
you need. On second thought, the rule could almost be reduced to just
having a little bit more than you need. You just need an appropriate
margin. Because if the table is small, how could you have plenty of cloth
and still have it look right? The best way to figure out the
appropriate size of the cloth is just to try it out. You'll zero in on
the solution quickly. Could this poem be referring metaphorically
to finding the appropriate fit in a lifestyle sense?
Dave's mention
of "margin" got Peter thinking about paper and writing. Perhaps cloth refers
to paper and Stein is making some comment about writing or ideas. But the poem
seems contradictory, like a koan, with enough being plenty and more,
but more being only almost enough. Is she saying that less is
more when it comes to writing? That concision and focus are what's important?
And maybe the spreading is the spreading of ideas through writing
and reading.
CLOTHING FOR AN AMPLE GIRTH
Barbara
then thought of another idea: what about cloth referring to the
material for the clothing that Alice used to make for herself and Gertrude?
Gertrude was also known to make fun of her own ample girth, which gives some
resonance to the words enough and plenty. Perhaps a nice
outfit is being made for a special occasion.
HUNTING FOR SNIPS, STARRING PARSNIPS & SCISSORS
Something
was still bothering Peter, however. Just what are snips? His first
thought was parsnips. Is she talking about parsnips with foliage, cooked
with oil, covered with a white cloth? They are sometimes called
colorless carrots, carrots being red and regular; they are round
if cut into sections; they could even be shiny if glazed with honey.
I love roast parsnips and am starving at the moment and so can't get them out
of my head, Peter exclaimed. But he expressed less confidence that Gertrude had
the same obsession.
Struggling
to keep his hunger pangs under control, Peter ventured a few more thoughts.
Could snips be cuts of something, cuts of fabric and paper? Snippets of
information, cutting from a newspaper or magazine? Snippets of thought?
Thoughts can be very colorful but have no real physical color. Or could snips be
an anagram of "pins"? Pins holding together the arrangement on the
table or holding the cloth together in some way? And the word oceans seems
so strange and out of context here. Could Gertrude be using oceans in
the sense of a large expanse, meaning the wondering and thinking is
being done in an expansive way that makes what is red [read] so
regular and enthusiastic?
Continuing
his dogged pursuit of the mysterious snips, Peter added: Could snips
be scissors, metal ones which would be shiny, with round finger
holes that have no color? Scissors are used to arrange flowers and foliage,
you would wipe and clean and lubricate them with an oiled cloth.
And cutting through different materials (paper, cloth, card, etc.) can look
like a ship sailing through the ocean. Maybe the different materials are
the different oceans. At which point Peter collapsed, exclaiming:
scissors or parsnips, what a muddle!
A FRENCH GRANDMOTHER IN LONDON WHO MADE HER OWN CLOTHES
Barbara
responded that pins and scissors do sound like the making of clothes. Eleanor
agreed, saying there is a strong sense of craft here. There's sewing going on,
making clothes.
Sarah
Maitland Parks then dropped by. She said the discussion reminded her of her
French grandmother in London who would make her own clothes, laying out the
cut-out patterns on the floor so they would fit in the shortest possible fabric
length, then going out and spending the little money she had on the best fabric
she could find.
CRAFT CAMP & PILES OF SNIPS
All
this talk of snips as scissors caused Peter to suddenly revive. He
excitedly said that scissors with the cut cloth in a "wake"
behind it really does look like a ship sailing through the sea with its wake
behind it. And don't we say we are sailing through something if we are cutting
it easily? Eleanor praised this scissors as boat metaphor, saying it was a
very strong image that would stay with her forever.
Musing
on possible generalizations, Dave murmured: Scissors cutting through cloth;
a paintbrush stroking through the oil on a cloth canvas; a pen
gliding across a piece of paper, leaving words in its wake; a Big Bang making a
universe out of whole cloth.
Channeling
the "Craft Camp" spirit, Allan opined that the Tender Buttons
Objects, the poems, are on the table, and the words that have been snipped out
of them are gotten rid of under the table. We find the snips to remake
the poems.
This
concept tickled Eleanor's fancy and she immediately elaborated on it in the
following compelling "treatment":
"Gertrude has
cut out brand new patterns, never created before (nor since), and she's placed
the pattern templates over the cloth (i.e., the letters of the
alphabet/language) and then she has cut the words out. Then the snips -
the bits that are left after the pattern has been cut out - all fall to the
floor and get kicked under the table. Now... because the patterns are so
unusual, Gertrude's fellow craft campers gather around the table, bemused.
Gertrude shows them what she is making... she takes the pieces (the words) and
sews them together to make an outfit, something for a thought/feeling to "wear".
This item of clothing (perhaps a dress? a cloak? a hat? a purse? an umbrella?)
is the strangest thing any of them have ever seen, but they're polite because
they respect the creative urge of all crafters, this is in fact the Craft Camp
motto - "Embrace the wonk". So they smile and retire to the main
cottage for dinner.
"But
late that night, while all the craft campers are fast asleep, a group of
intrepid pattern seekers enter the craft studio to search for the meaning
hidden behind Gertrude's strange poetic items. Each of them bends down and
grabs a handful of snips and starts to sort through them, some by color,
some by shape, some by texture, etc. That's us!!! And what we discover, just
before dawn is this - in the process of sorting through the snips, we
have unwittingly created an extraordinary artwork of our own. It's a thing of
beauty, a communal joy, and yet - it's a coded secret which few people can
appreciate. But then.... those sorts of artworks are always the very best
kind."
Dave
bowed to Eleanor's screenwriting skills and humbly offered the following
variation for consideration by the Buttons: Perhaps the snips are
actually Stein's poems, not the left-over remains from the making of the poems.
Maybe she is using regular patterns, which represent the conventional, but then
throwing out the cut-outs and keeping the remains, the snips, which
would be the unconventional thing to do. As Eleanor says, the snips have
a beauty of their own. They echo the cut-outs in strange, inverted ways. They
are ships on their own journey, and sips from a special wine.
SPREADING & PLENITUDE
The
Buttons were then joined by Mary Armour, who began pondering the phrase and
besides if there is no more spreading is there plenty of room for it. The
word spreading caught her eye. The difference is spreading
[a famous line from another Tender Buttons poem, "A
Carafe, That Is A Blind Glass."], the table is spread out, the cloth abundant and spread
out. Stein likes spaciousness, she likes plenitude. Spread out for our delight,
language games that invite participation and pleasure, cloth that may be
a synonym for flesh, for skin, for what is able to spread and keep spreading,
that will cover the world with difference, a showing that is also a
giving. Is there a question in here? There is no interrogation mark but it
sounds like a question.
Peter
agreed that the poet is "Plenitude Stein" (subsequently rephrased by
Mary to "The Gertrude of Plenitude"). He wondered if she was
referring to the spreading of ideas and change.
WHY DO WE COVER?
Mary
felt that Stein is communicating something to do with what a cloth looks
like and what it does. Why do we cover tables? Why do we cover beds? Why do we
cover bodies? What is being concealed, what is being revealed, what is
being covered for the occasion, what may be round and white and
full to perfection? Peter replied, yes, why do we cover all these
things? Decoration, coordination, cleanliness, warmth, fashion, decorum,
to add emphasis? To communicate information about the thing covered perhaps?
And maybe more importantly, about the person who is doing the
covering?
Sarah
nodded and said that the person who decides which tablecloth to put out,
or what the curtains are to be made of, puts their stamp on a space. It's a way
of marking your territory. A very female version of it. If a woman moves into a
house she'll change the furnishings immediately to get rid of the previous
partner's presence.
THE COSMIC ANGLE
Allan, who is known to have an interest in astronomy, offered another take on spreading: The fabric of space-time is spreading. This can be measured by the redshift of the cosmic background radiation. However, it's true that Stein wouldn't have known about this in 1912. Peter then presented an image of the cosmic background radiation, suggesting that this may actually be an image of Stein's table that is somehow traveling to us through time, written large on the sky, and shifted in color by the universe's expansion. The Buttons could not deny a certain sense of awe at the majesty of this vision.
REGULAR & ENTHUSIASTIC RED
After
fruitfully connecting the scientific and humanistic worlds with his
astronomical interpretation, Allan began to consider the meaning of the phrase Red
so regular & enthusiastic. Sounds like blood, he said. The regular
heartbeat. A regular period. An ocean of colored
red that is gotten rid of in shining flows. Colored
rid. This love [of Gertrude and Alice] produces no babies. There
is no round color. The flow of blood does not stop. Their love
is regular & throbs steadily.
This
discussion of color prompted Steiny to point out that Stein was trained as
a doctor to always look at a patient's color--or lack of it. So
while she tuned up her eye for color in art, her eye for color was first coming
from Science. The Buttons marveled at science and art intersecting yet again in
their close reading of Stein's poetry.
DINNER & WINE
Science
is indeed wonderful, but Sarah was feeling a specific social vibe from
"More.". As a whole, she said, it makes me think of polite lunches or
dinners, where the centerpiece on the table is made of some foliage and
the people have to use all their skills to make conversation winningly,
i.e., charmingly, carefully, wittily, emptily. Can you tell I can't stand this
necessary art?
Dave
replied, if we are talking about a dinner here, then maybe the red is
red wine, which goes well with a lot of things. Round is also a
descriptor that is used with wine: "Round : A wine that has a
good sense of body that is not overly tannic." And maybe snips are
really "sips".
Peter
liked this idea and excitedly noted that the difference between snips and
sips is an "n"; turn it upside down and take it out, its a
"u", a cup or a glass to drink from. And More then could
be more as in social mores. Allan added: That cup is you. One
has has social mores because there is not just a me. There is also a "u." Let's drink to that.
The
Buttons immediately assented to Allan's call for liquid refreshment, as it had
been a long day in the literary mines. And not long after that they drifted off
to some well-deserved sleep.
SETTING THE TABLE - A DIALOG
The
first to wake was Mary, with a mug of Ethiopian coffee by her side. She was
thinking about the first line of "More." and said, this makes me
think of the moreness and rightness of a table setting with foliage
gracefully arranged in glass and wood or silver cutlery polished with a
little soft white cloth and some scented oil. Or an
altar with ivy leaves entwined around a candle and a folded napkin and small
jug of oil for anointing.
Dave, a
few time zones away, ambled into the Buttons virtual kitchen and said, good morning, Mary. Seeing her previous
words hanging in the air, he responded: Perhaps "A Cloth." and
"More." are both about preparing a table for a dinner. "A Cloth."
refers to the basic first step--covering the table with a cloth. Then in
"More." the additional elements are added to the table, including the foliage
centerpiece and something red. What is the red item? Wine?
Roses? Napkins? Does snips refer to cut roses? Could shining refer
to cutlery?
Mary,
taking comfort in her coffee, replied: Some everyday and delightful ritual
going on here Dave -- anointing and snipping roses, the red and
the white, the foliage green, silver cutlery, the white
cloth, the golden oil. The essence of hospitality, what is inviting,
what is more than the individual actions and gestures, more than the objects of
the table, how they belong together.
Continuing
the quiet morning dialog, Dave said: When one sees a set table, there is a
feeling of expectancy, of more to come, isn't there?
Mary
concurred, saying: Yes, exactly Dave and what is that more? The company,
the conversation, the togetherness and intimacy. Good food! More wine! Holding
hands under the table, etc. Snippets of this and that.
SUMMING UP THE SCENE
Eleanor
then appeared and was immediately taken by this dialog, saying in her lovely
Australian accent:
"Mary
& Dave, your dialogue here is wonderful. It's as if the two of you are
having a conversation while you're setting the table together, or perhaps you
are already seated at the table and admiring the objects on it. Also admiring
each other's words.
"I
am suddenly reminded of Anthony Hopkins' character—the butler—in Remains of the Day, carefully measuring each place
setting. [Eleanor is famous for her vast storehouse of highly relevant
film references.] There is a delightful interplay in this film between the
formal ritual, the repressed sexuality, the abundant food and wine, the shine
and decoration, the words and the silences. And a great deal of romance, of
course."
The Buttons'
discussion of "A Cloth." and "More." thus drew to a
satisfying close on Eleanor's cinematic encapsulation, having yielded many
sparkling insights and enjoyable moments. The Buttons' work felt
a bit like being at an enjoyable dinner party, an intellectual salon,
conversing with wonderfully interesting people, a mood which seemed to be
pre-figured in the poems themselves, thus making for a delightful parallel
between life and art. On behalf of the Buttons, dear Reader, I thank you for
re-living our experience and joining us through these words.
1 comment:
A wonderful discussion we had about these poems. But then again, each of our discussions is a gem. Thanks Karren, and special thanks to Dave for this great write-up. Onwards!!
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