78 Poetry for Students
Author Biography
Archie Randolph Ammons was born on February
18, 1926, at his parents’ farmhouse near Whiteville,
North Carolina. His childhood was spent with his
parents and two older sisters on the family’s to-
bacco farm, which his grandfather had built. It was
during these formative years that he developed the
understanding of nature and appreciation of its
complexity that is evident in almost all of his po-
ems. After graduating from Whiteville High School
in 1943, he went to work in the navy shipyard at
Wilmington, North Carolina. He enrolled in the
Navy in 1944 and did a tour of duty in the South
Pacific during the end of World War II. While in
the Navy, during the long night watches, Ammons
began to write poetry.
When the war was over, Ammons took advan-
tage of the G. I. Bill, a law that subsidized college
tuition for veterans. He attended Wake Forest Uni-
versity, changing his major often between pre-med-
icine, biology, chemistry, and general science. In
1949, he graduated with a bachelor of science de-
gree, and soon after he was married. After a few years
of graduate school at the University of California at
Berkley, he went to work for a small company in
southern New Jersey that made glass products for
laboratories. He was there for twelve years, during
which time his first two poetry collections were pub-
lished. At a poetry reading at Cornell University, he
discussed the idea of teaching with another faculty
member. The next year he was hired, the start of a
long-term relationship between Ammons and Cor-
nell that was to last for the rest of his life.
Ammons has won the National Book Award
twice, first for Collected Poems, 1951–1971(1972)
and second for the book-length poem Garbage
(1993). In 1993, the Poetry Society awarded Am-
mons the Robert Frost Medal in recognition of his
life’s work. “The City Limits” can be found in
Briefings: Poems Small and Easy(1971), in which
it was first published, and in Collected Poems,
1951–1971. Ammons died in Ithaca, New York, on
February 25, 2001, at the age of seventy-five.
Poem Summary
When you consider the radiance, that it does not
withhold
itself but pours its abundance without selection into
every
nook and cranny not overhung or hidden; when
you consider
that birds’ bones make no awful noise against the
light but
lie low in the light as in a high testimony; when 5
you consider
the radiance, that it will look into the guiltiest
swervings of the weaving heart and bear itself upon
them,
not flinching into disguise or darkening; when you
consider
the abundance of such resource as illuminates the
glow-blue
bodies and gold-skeined wings of flies swarming^10
the dumped
guts of a natural slaughter or the coil of shit and in
no
way winces from its storms of generosity; when
you consider
that air or vacuum, snow or shale, squid or wolf,
rose or lichen,
each is accepted into as much light as it will take,
then
the heart moves roomier, the man stands and looks 15
about, the
leaf does not increase itself above the grass, and
the dark
work of the deepest cells is of a tune with May
bushes
and fear lit by the breadth of such calmly turns to
praise.
The City Limits
A. R. Ammons
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