All posts by Michael Cummins

“Major Man”

By Epic Quartos, April 3, 2026

The “major man” is one of those Stevensian phantoms that seems, at first blush, to be made of marble but reveals itself, upon a closer reading, to be composed entirely of mist and syntax. In the section of Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction beginning “Apotheosis is not / The origin of the major man,” Stevens is performing a kind of secular consecration. He is trying to describe a hero who can survive the death of God without becoming a god himself—a figure who is “compact in invincible foils,” yet birthed from the “studious eye” of a man sitting up late with his books.

Harold Bloom, who read Stevens with a sort of proprietary, vatic intensity, saw in these lines the high drama of the “Sublime.” For Bloom, the “major man” is a “giant of the imagination,” a defensive maneuver against the crushing weight of the past. When Stevens speaks of “invincible foils,” Bloom hears the clatter of the fencing match; he sees the poet parrying the “Anxiety of Influence.” The “major man” is not a person, Bloom would insist, but a “trope of the Self”—the “Central Man” who emerges when the poet has successfully cleared a space through the “Askesis” of his own solitude. Bloom’s Stevens is always a bit of a pugilist, a solitary wrestler in the midnight of the spirit, turning “reason” into a weapon of survival.

But then there is Helen Vendler, whose critical eye is less like a thunderbolt and more like a jeweler’s loupe. Vendler, always suspicious of the grand mythic claim, directs our attention to the “hum.” She notes, with her characteristic tonal sensitivity, that the major man is “the object of / The hum of thoughts evaded in the mind.” For Vendler, this is the “poetry of the nerves.” She isn’t looking for a Bloomian hero; she is looking for the “linguistic architecture of the private life.” The “major man” is a “conceptual inhabitant,” a way for the mind to talk to itself about its own complexity. When he is “swaddled in revery,” Vendler sees not a warrior’s armor, but the delicate, almost domestic layering of thought. She reminds us that for Stevens, the “Supreme Fiction” must be abstract, and abstraction is not a lack of feeling, but a refinement of it—a way of capturing the “hum” before it hardens into the “apotheosis” of dogma.

What Stevens gives us here is a masterclass in the embodiment of the thought. The “studious eye” at midnight is a gorgeous, almost Flaubertian detail—the physical reality of the intellectual life. He comes “from reason,” yes, but he is “lighted” by the gaze. It is a moment of profound, secular “revery.” Bloom wants the major man to be a prophet; Vendler wants him to be a perfect sentence. The truth of the poem lies in the “evasion”—the way the “major man” exists just on the edge of the mind’s ability to catch him. He is the hero of the quiet hour, the “invincible” ghost of our own best thinking.

Written and edited utilizing AI

The Modern Olympus: “Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction” – Wallace Stevens

By Michael Cummins, Editor/Publisher

When we consider the “Epic” at Epic Quartos, we often look toward the horizon of history—to the wine-dark seas of Homer or the celestial hierarchies of Milton. Yet, in the mid-20th century, Wallace Stevens performed a feat of literary transmutation. He took the scale, the ambition, and the architectural density of the classical epic and turned it inward. The result, Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction, is not merely a poem; it is a secular cathedral built of thought, a “Modern Olympus” where the gods are replaced by the transformative power of the human imagination.

The Heroism of the Mind

In a traditional epic, the hero proves their worth through physical trials. In Notes, the “hero” is the poetic consciousness itself, navigating the treacherous terrain between “Fact” and “Imagination.” Stevens argues that in a post-religious world, we require a “Supreme Fiction”—a way of seeing the world that is transparently a fiction, yet one in which we can believe.

This is a monumental task, and Stevens structures it with the mathematical precision of a master architect. The poem is divided into three sections, each a commandment for the modern creator: It Must Be Abstract, It Must Change, and It Must Give Pleasure.

The Critical Perspective: Bloom and Vendler

To understand the weight of Notes in the canon of long-form poetry, one must look to the giants of literary criticism who championed it. Harold Bloom, perhaps the poem’s most fervent advocate, famously positioned Stevens as the true heir to the Romantic tradition of Milton and Emerson. Bloom viewed Notes as a “transcendental” achievement, stating:

“Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction is the most persuasive and moving long poem in the American language… it is the central poem of our climate, the work that most fully realizes the imaginative possibilities of our century.”

For Bloom, the poem is epic because of its struggle. It is the record of a mind refusing to succumb to the “pressure of reality,” fighting instead to create a space where the human spirit can reside.

Conversely, Helen Vendler, known for her microscopic attention to Stevens’ linguistic “music,” highlights the poem’s structural brilliance and its emotional resonance. She sees the poem as a living organism of thought. Vendler once remarked on the poem’s unique ability to balance the coldness of philosophy with the warmth of human experience:

“In Notes, Stevens found a way to make the abstract sensuous… The poem does not just talk about the supreme fiction; it enacts the process of its discovery, moving through the ‘weather’ of the mind with a rhythmic certainty that is, in itself, a form of pleasure.”

The Three Pillars of the Supreme Fiction

Each of the poem’s three movements serves as a lesson for the modern writer of the “Quarto”:

  1. It Must Be Abstract: Stevens begins by stripping away the “rot” of old metaphors. He demands we look at the “sun” not as a god or a chariot, but as the sun itself. For the epic poet, this is the call to find universality not in tired symbols, but in the pure, unadorned essence of being.
  2. It Must Change: Stasis is the death of the imagination. Stevens recognizes that any “Truth” we find must be fluid to remain true. The epic of the modern age cannot be a static monument; it must be a river, constantly refreshing its own banks.
  3. It Must Give Pleasure: Ultimately, the act of writing is an act of existence that must culminate in joy. Even in its most difficult passages, Notes breaks into moments of “crystalline” beauty. As Stevens writes, “The blue woman, midnight, leaning on her hand / At a window above the sea,” we are reminded that the purpose of the long poem is to return us to the world with a heightened sense of wonder.

Conclusion: Why “Notes” Belongs at Epic Quartos

At Epic Quartos, we believe the “Act of Writing is… The Act of Existing in That Moment.” Wallace Stevens lived this mantra more fully than perhaps any other poet of his generation. By composing Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction, he proved that the “Long-Form” is the only vessel large enough to hold the contradictions of modern life.

He invites us not to worship old gods, but to become “the jar in Tennessee”—the creative force that takes a wilderness and, through the sheer power of arrangement, gives it order. Notes is our map for that journey. It is the modern Olympus, and its peak is still waiting for those brave enough to climb through the clouds of their own abstraction.

THIS REVIEW WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI