Modern American Poetry
(^172) Richard Poirier resemblances, evidences in zones and demarcations for the human capacity to make a claim on an alien land ...
Soundings for Home 173 The wood burns of itself, with a warmth that cannot be felt and without giving any evidence whatever that ...
(^174) Richard Poirier dear and connate than in streets or villages. In the tranquil landscape, and especially in the distant li ...
Soundings for Home 175 insistent feature of Frost’s poetry and of his writing about poetry. There is scarcely a single poem whic ...
(^176) Richard Poirier something that imagination could createas an alternative form of experience. Stevens himself very beautif ...
Soundings for Home 177 dismissed merely because we think that we have long since outlived the ideal. The truth is that we are co ...
(^178) Richard Poirier meeting, in Florida during the spring of 1935, Stevens had apparently complained that Frost simply wrote ...
Soundings for Home 179 to cliché. The reader is asked to indulge in a cliché, and to do so without irony, without even the patro ...
(^180) Richard Poirier Cocoon” is a poem of seeing more than of walking, and the extravagance consists in the effort to sustain ...
Soundings for Home 181 with some sort of ulterior, “creative” intention by a poet-observer from a passing train. The poems are p ...
(^182) Richard Poirier She fears not him, they fear not life. They know where another light has been, And more than one, to thei ...
Soundings for Home 183 He must have measured to the further wall. But we who passed were not to see him fall. The miles and mile ...
(^184) Richard Poirier problematics of mere accidental relationships, mere glimpses of a “field looked into going past” (“Desert ...
Soundings for Home 185 who write poems or by the kind of Emersonian poet who is potentially in any one of us. Significantly, the ...
(^186) Richard Poirier Through outer trees to shade grown black I peered and saw, like strips of snow That form in rocks the age ...
Soundings for Home 187 claim on Frost than a quite minor poem by Van Dore which itself, directly or indirectly, derives from pas ...
(^188) Richard Poirier Wordsworth’s poem is closer to Frost’s than its “echoes loud / Redoubled and redoubled” might superficial ...
Soundings for Home 189 silence, or embodiment. But he stands there bathed in a mythological heroism nevertheless. What does happ ...
(^190) Richard Poirier great human tradition and a great human predicament. In the expansive gestures of inclusiveness made at t ...
Soundings for Home 191 When, as was commonly the case, I had none to commune with, I used to raise the echoes by striking with a ...
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