More intimately, American poet Wallace Stevens also likened the dead of
the war to the season of autumn, but his poem “The Death of a Soldier” examines
the loss of a single man.
The Death of a Soldier
He does not
become a three-days’ personage,
Imposing his separation,
Calling for pomp.
Imposing his separation,
Calling for pomp.
Death is
absolute and without memorial,
As in a season of autumn,
When the wind stops.
As in a season of autumn,
When the wind stops.
When the wind
stops and, over the heavens,
The clouds go, nevertheless,
In their direction.
The clouds go, nevertheless,
In their direction.
--Wallace Stevens
As natural as
the change of the seasons is the death of a soldier; a man’s life narrows to a
single focal point of duty and orders, and “death is expected.” Yet for the common infantry soldier
(each of whom is not common at all to those who know and love him) death is accompanied by neither fame nor processions. His body does not lie in state; his photo
does not appear in the newspaper with tales of his courage. Instead, his name appears among hundreds of
others, a small line of print in the casualty lists, and his body is hastily
buried – if it can be found.
Despite this ordinary death, Stevens’
poem asks us to pause, to be still, and to honor the moment when one
soldier falls, “As in a season of autumn,/When the wind stops.” Each fallen man
is worthy of that moment of silence.
The highly
condensed three-line verses remind us of a life over too soon, and the
final line of each stanza is brief and blunt, mirroring the soldier’s abrupt
end. The clouds continue to pass across the sky; the army marches on without this
one man, and those he loved and left must also soldier on, although their lives are
the poorer for the loss. The poem forces us to acknowledge that the death of a soldier in battle is nothing remarkable, but rather
an expected event in the nature of war.
Wallace Stevens
is a key figure in the development of American modernist poetry, but his war
poems have been largely forgotten. Thirty-seven-years old when
America entered the war, Stevens did not serve in the American Expeditionary
Force, but continued to work as an insurance agent in Hartford, Connecticut. His poem “Death
of a Soldier” was written from the home front nearly one-hundred years ago, and yet it still challenges readers today, asking us to consider the too-often underestimated human costs of war.