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The Poems of Peter Davison, 1957-1995
 
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The Poems of Peter Davison, 1957-1995 [Paperback]

Peter Davison (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

January 7, 1997
The poetry of Peter Davison, of which this is the ninth volume, covers a broad range of subject matter. Musical and supple, with rewards for the eye, the ear, and the mind, concerned as much with country as with city matters, Davison's poems move past personality. They open questions of identity, explorations of the natural world, personal and religious conflict, and the mysterious workings of memory. His poetry, such as the long poem "The Great Ledge," is especially moving and powerful when read aloud.

Though Davison is perhaps most widely known as an editor of poetry, his poems are neither academic nor exclusive. John Hall Wheelock wrote, after Davison's earliest book won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award in 1963, "With Peter Davison, feeling has come back into poetry." May Swenson, reviewing his second book, said: "There is a savage self-revelation and deep understanding of the hearts and minds of others." Alfred Kazin spoke of "the bone-sharp integrity of Davison's poetry, with its notable openness to difficulties, both personal and historic." When Davison's fourth book was published in Great Britain, John Fuller wrote, "What an assured talent is here revealed! It is a splendidly accessible body of work," and Robert Penn Warren concurred: "He has found a new depth and force...He has splendidly found himself...himself and his way." Vernon Young called him, in Parnassus, "one of the few poets of the first order writing in English today," and James Dickey said, Peter Davison's quiet, deep poems are among the best being written. Any thoughtful reader will be moved by his clear, unpretentious writing, his imaginative participation in life, his passionate balance." Jay Parini, in Virginia Quarterly, called Davison "one of America's finest contemporary poets, whose sharpness of vision and candor [leave] the reader breathless," and Phoebe Pettingell, in The New Leader, said, "Peter Davison's verse illuminates the commonplace with a mystical sense of the divine revealed in nature."

This volume, combining Davison's most recent work with all the earlier poems he wishes to preserve, reveals a poet in his late middle age writing out of the midst of a life both active and contemplative, yet given over to poetry. He is a worthy heir to the passionate poetic tradition of Thomas Hardy and Robert Frost.


From the Hardcover edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

About Time
Absalom
Adagio In G-minor (moliere And Albinoni)
After Being Away
After The Exorcism
Afterwards
Artemis
Asking Nothing
At Sixty
At The Site Of Last Night's Fire
Atmospheres: 4. Boulder 1979
Autumn Zodiac
Barn Fever
Bed Time
The Black Aspen
The Breaking Of The Day
The Breath Of Life
Call Sign Aquaris
Calypso
Castaway
Circolo Della Caccia
The City And The Island: 3. The Emigration: Newfoundland '65
The City And The Island: 4. The Immigrant's Apology
The City And The Island: 5. Travelling Among Islands
The Collector
The Compound Eye
Concentration
Cracks In The Universe
Creatures Of The Genitive
Crossing The Void
The Dance Of The Hours, Or, It's A Living
Dance Of The Shaking Sheets
Dark Houses
Death Is The Mother Of Beauty
The Death Of The Virgin (rembrandt)
Death Song: The Moment
The Destroyer
Doors
Easter Island: The Statues Speak
Embraces
Emerald
Epitaph For S.p.
Equinox 1980
Equinox 1990
Eurydice In Darkness
Evening Grosbeaks
The Face In The Field
The Fall Of The Doll's House
The Farm Animals' Desertion
Fawn
Finale: Presto
The Firstling
Fogged In
Foot
For Amphibians
For Jane, Writing
The Forked Tongue
From The Outland
Generations Of Swan
Gifts
Goodbye
Great Grandmother
The Great Ledge
Ground
The Hanging Man
Haskell's Mill
Having Saints
The Hawk Of The Mind
The Heroine
House Holding
The Housewife's Paradise
Hunger
'i Hardly Dream Of Anyone Who Is Still Alive'
Il Se Sauve
In Quercy, 1993
In The Seventies: 1. Is Anything Wrong
In The Seventies: 4. Motley
In The Seventies: 5. Into The Future
In The Seventies: 6. Poem Of Force
In The Seventies: 7. At The Close
In The Sixties: 1. The Pleaders
In The Sixties: 2. The Gun Hand
In The Sixties: 3. What Counts
In The Sixties: 4. 1968
In The Sixties: 5. The Two Of You
In The Sixties: 6. A Word In Your Ear On Indifference
Interval
Intimacies
January 1977
Jenny
Journey To The Interior
Keeping Accounts
The Keepsake
La Bocca Della Verita
La Cathedrale Engloutie
Lambkill
Last Infirmity
The Last Word
Late Summer Love Song
The Laughter Of Women
Letter From A City Dweller
Life Mask
Literary Portraits
The Losing Struggle
Low Lands
Lucifer Ashore
Lunch At The Coq D'or
Lying In The Shade (after Trilussa)
Magpie
Making Marks
Melons
The Mockingbird
The Money Cry
Mother & Child #3
Mother Church
My Lady By The Lake
The Narcissists
New Year's Eve
New Yor I
North Shore
Not Forgotten
Nothing Sudden
The Obituary Writer
Offisa Popp; A Maneuver In Class Warfare
Old Photograph
On Ithaca
On The Island: The Darkened Sun
One Of The Muses
The Oracle: Sample Questions, Stock Answers
The Ordeal Tree
The Origin Of Species
Our Eyes: A Family Gallery
Paradise As A Garden
Passages For Puritans
The Passing Of Thistle
Peaches
The Peeper
Peripheral Vision
The Philanderer
The Poem In The Park
Pretending To Be Asleep
Questions Of Swimming, 1935
The Ram Beneath The Barn
Rites Of Passage: 1946
Sacrificial Mask
Satan In Goatskin
Second Nesting
The Silent Piano
Sleeping Beauty Variations
Song: Bright Being
The Sound Of Wings
Spells In Sawyer's Cove
Standing Fast: Fox Into Hedgehog
The Star Watcher
Stumps
The Suicide
Summer School
The Swordless Statue (thomas Ball's 'washington')
Taking Pleasure
They That Have The Power To Hurt
To A Mad Friend
Toward An Understanding Of The Public Life
'true Feeling Leaves No Memory'
Two Midrashim
Uncompromising Positions
Under The Roof Of Memory
The Unfrocked Governess
Unsung Hours
The Vanishing Point
Walking The Boundaries
The War Of The Pelicans
The Winner
Winter Sunrise
Wintering Over
Wordless Winter
Words For A Slow Movement
Words For My Father
Wren
Ye Have Your Closes
Zenith: Walker Creek 1. Head Stone
Zenith: Walker Creek 2. Bicentennial
Zenith: Walker Creek 3. Making Much Of Orioles
Zenith: Walker Creek 4. Zenith: Walker Creek
Zenith: Walker Creek 5. Day Of Wrath
Zenith: Walker Creek 6. Cross Cut
Zenith: Walker Creek 7. Thanksgiving
Zenith: Walker Creek 8. Skiing By Moonlight
-- Table of Poems from Poem Finder® --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From the Inside Flap

The poetry of Peter Davison, of which this is the ninth volume, covers a broad range of subject matter. Musical and supple, with rewards for the eye, the ear, and the mind, concerned as much with country as with city matters, Davison's poems move past personality. They open questions of identity, explorations of the natural world, personal and religious conflict, and the mysterious workings of memory. His poetry, such as the long poem "The Great Ledge," is especially moving and powerful when read aloud.

Though Davison is perhaps most widely known as an editor of poetry, his poems are neither academic nor exclusive. John Hall Wheelock wrote, after Davison's earliest book won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Award in 1963, "With Peter Davison, feeling has come back into poetry." May Swenson, reviewing his second book, said: "There is a savage self-revelation and deep understanding of the hearts and minds of others." Alfred Kazin spoke of "the bone-sharp integrity of Davison's poetry, with its notable openness to difficulties, both personal and historic." When Davison's fourth book was published in Great Britain, John Fuller wrote, "What an assured talent is here revealed! It is a splendidly accessible body of work," and Robert Penn Warren concurred: "He has found a new depth and force...He has splendidly found himself...himself and his way." Vernon Young called him, in Parnassus, "one of the few poets of the first order writing in English today," and James Dickey said, Peter Davison's quiet, deep poems are among the best being written. Any thoughtful reader will be moved by his clear, unpretentious writing, his imaginative participation in life, his passionate balance." Jay Parini, in Virginia Quarterly, called Davison "one of America's finest contemporary poets, whose sharpness of vision and candor [leave] the reader breathless," and Phoebe Pettingell, in The New Leader, said, "Peter Davison's verse illuminates the commonplace with a mystical sense of the divine revealed in nature."

This volume, combining Davison's most recent work with all the earlier poems he wishes to preserve, reveals a poet in his late middle age writing out of the midst of a life both active and contemplative, yet given over to poetry. He is a worthy heir to the passionate poetic tradition of Thomas Hardy and Robert Frost.


From the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf (January 7, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679765891
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679765899
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,456,317 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Peter Davison Poems, March 5, 2009
This review is from: The Poems of Peter Davison, 1957-1995 (Paperback)
If you enjoy this poet you will be amazed with this book. It contains most of his works throughout his life. It is an amazing tribute to this poet and the beauty and charm he expresses is inspiring. I am very happy to have this in my library.
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