Magritte’s ‘The Human Condition’

By Jacob Silkstone

 

The Human Condition (1935), by René Magritte

How can anyone enjoy interpreting symbols?
They are ‘substitutes’ that are only useful

to the mind incapable of knowing the things
themselves.

~ René Magritte

The pear is not seen
As the observer wills.

~ Wallace Stevens, ‘Study of two Pears’

 

Mysterium of the single object
sovereign in its haecceity,
symbolizing nothing
beyond itself.

So here an easel, cannon ball, canvas
depicting a landscape streaming
beyond a window frame,
asymmetry in the juxtapositions,
no apologies offered.

No false claims of imagined gestalt,
no Aristotelian resolution
correcting a brush’s bristles.

To walk in Magrittean shoes
is to witness strangeness
in both canvas and yourself.

0bject pristine, unviolated
real as stone.
Celebration of
otherness.

~ Doug Bolling

Doug Bolling‘s poetry has appeared widely in literary reviews. He has received four Pushcart Prize nominations, has graduate degrees from the University of Iowa and has taught at several colleges and universities. He now resides outside Chicago in Flossmoor, Illinois.

Next Read
Literature.Jul 23, 2013

Magritte’s ‘The Human Condition’

Poem of the Week (July 23), by Doug Bolling

By Jacob Silkstone