Can Poetry Save the Earth?: A Field Guide to Nature Poems

(Ann) #1

386 INDEX


“Great Mullen” (Williams), 144
Gregory, Lady, 107


H. D., 151
Hagar (Biblical figure), 20, 276, 277
Haiku, 4, 124, 149
Haines, John, 11, 282–89,368–69; “The Eye in
the Rock,” 288–89; “Horns,” 285–86; News
from the Glacier, 284; and other poets, 182,
323, 353; “Prayer to the Snowy Owl,” 286;
“Smoke,” 287; The Stars, the Snow, the Fire,
282; Winter News, 284
Hall, Donald, 318–26,370;“Kicking the
Leaves,” 323; “Letter in the New Year,” 324;
“Maple Syrup,” 322; Ox-Cart Man, 319–22;
The Painted Bed, 325; “Stone Walls,” 323;
“The Wish,” 325; “Without,” 318
Hampstead (England), 14, 54, 98
“HAMSIN Breaking After Five Days”
(Kaufman), 278
Han-Shan (Chinese poet), 349–50
Hardwick, Elizabeth, 37
Hardy, Thomas, 88–93, 117, 187, 336, 363;
“After a Journey,” 91; “The Darkling
Thrush,” 89–90; “During Wind and Rain,”
8, 92–93; “The Going,” 90; “I Found Her
Out There,” 90–91; as influence, 117, 336;
Jude the Obscure, 89; and other poets, 107,
219, 285; “The Voice,” 91
Hass, Robert, 57, 315, 355, 357, 372; on deer,
xiii, 226; Japanese translations by, 4, 360
Hawaii, 304–7, 336
“The Hawk in the Rain” (Hughes), 303,
329–30
Hawk Tower (at Jeffers’s California home),
172–74
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 8, 76
“Hay” (Kumin), 293
“Haymaking” (Thomas), 132–33
Heaney, Seamus, 57
“Hearing the Names of the Valleys”
(Merwin), 307
“Hearing your words” (Millay), 187–88
“Heaven-Haven” (Hopkins), 99–100
“He ‘Digesteth Hard Yron’” (Moore), 183
Heights of Macchu Picchu (Neruda), 196–201,
285, 338, 342, 356
Hemingway, Ernest, 151, 168, 236, 336
Herbert, George, 23, 242
“Herbsttag” (Rilke), 52
Heyen, William, 357
Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 75–76, 82, 86


Hiroshima (Japan), 128, 197, 354
“His Foreboding” (Roethke), 219
History, xiv, 8–10, 271; in Eliot and Lowell,
260; Frost, 128–29; Kaufman, 276–77;
Kunitz, 204–6; Lowell, 262–64; Millay,
189–91; Neruda, 196–97, 201; Roethke,
221; Snyder, 352, 353–54; Stafford, 257–58;
Walcott, 338–43; Yeats, 104–12. See also
Vietnam War; World War I; World War II
Hogan, Linda, 357
Hokusai Katsushika, 273
Hollander, John, 21, 360
Homer, 73, 211, 296, 336
Homer, Winslow, 14
Hopi Indians, 1, 12, 351
Hopkins, Gerard Manley, 13, 67, 94–103, 356,
363;“Binsey Poplars,” 99, 208, 269, 271;
“God ’s Grandeur,” 24–25, 95–97;
“Heaven-Haven,” 99–100; journals of, 14,
92, 94, 100, 101; language of, 4, 14, 24–25,
49, 94–103, 177, 244, 260, 271; organic de-
tails in poems of, 94–103, 106; and other
poets, 231, 236, 244, 245, 260, 261, 269, 271,
272, 297, 325, 329, 351; and painting, 147;
“Pied Beauty,” 94–96; “Spring,” 97; “The
Windhover,” 98, 303, 327
“Horns” (Haines), 285–86
Horses, 157, 240, 290–93, 329
Housman, A. E., 88
Houston, Sam, 151, 152
“How Everything Happens” (Swenson), 242
Howl (Ginsberg), 215
“How Many Nights” (Kinnell), 309–10
Hudson’s Bay Company, 304
Hughes, Ted, 305, 327–34, 336, 370–71; on
birds, 7, 80; Crow, 332; The Earth Owl and
Other Moon-People, 332; “The Hawk in the
Rain,” 303, 329–30; influences on, 57, 99,
329–30; Moortown Diary, 333; and other po-
ets, 291, 292, 323; “Pike,” 7, 183, 208, 218,
232, 330–32, 334; Poetry Is, 327; “17 Febru-
ary 1974,” 333–34; “The Thought-Fox,”
218, 327–28, 351
Hummingbirds. See Birds
“Hurt Hawks” (Jeffers), 172, 232, 329
Hutchinson, George, 235–36
Huxley, Aldous, 34
Hymns, 10, 28–29, 83, 234, 302, 309

Iconographs, 242
“The Idea of Order at Key West” (Stevens),
139
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