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“Its only bondage was the circling sky” John Clare at Home in Helpston
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John Felstiner
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations xi
- Preface The Poetry of Earth Is Never Dead xiii
- Introduction Care in Such a World 1
-
PART ONE
- “stony rocks for the conies” Singing Ecology unto the Lord 19
- “Western wind, when will thou blow” Anon Was an Environmentalist 28
- “The stationary blasts of waterfalls” Blake, the Wordsworths, and the Dung 34
- “The white Eddy-rose . . . obstinate in resurrection” Coleridge Imagining 39
- “last oozings hours by hours” John Keats Eking It Out 46
- “Its only bondage was the circling sky” John Clare at Home in Helpston 56
- “Nature was naked, and I was also” Adamic Walt Whitman 64
- “Earth’s most graphic transaction” Syllables of Emily Dickinson 75
- “sick leaves . . . storm-birds . . . rotten rose . . . rain-drop” Nature Shadowing Thomas Hardy 88
- “freshness deep down things” The World Charged by Gerard Manley Hopkins 94
- “O honey bees,/Come build in the empty house of the stare” Nature Versus History in W. B. Yeats 104
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PART TWO
- “strangeness from my sight” Robert Frost and the Fun in How You Say a Thing 115
- “white water rode the black forever” Frost and the Necessity of Metaphor 123
- “Larks singing over No Man’s Land” England Thanks to Edward Thomas, 1914–1917 130
- “the necessary angel of earth” Wings of Wallace Stevens 136
- “broken/seedhusks” Reviving America with William Carlos Williams 141
- “source then a blue as” Williams and the Environmental News 149
- “room for me and a mountain lion” D. H. Lawrence in Taormina and Taos 162
- “not man/Apart” Ocean, Rock, Hawk, and Robinson Jeffers 170
- “submerged shafts of the//sun,/split like spun/glass” Marianne Moore’s Fantastic Reverence 176
- “There, there where those black spruces crowd” To Steepletop and Ragged Island with Edna St. Vincent Millay 184
- “Gale sustained on a slope” Pablo Neruda at Machu Picchu 194
- “the wild/braid of creation/trembles” Stanley Kunitz—His Nettled Field, His Dune Garden 202
- “Bright trout poised in the current” Things Whole and Holy for Kenneth Rexroth 211
- “I swayed out on the wildest wave alive” Theodore Roethke from Greenhouse to Seascape 216
- “That they are there!” George Oppen’s Psalm of Attentiveness 223
- “surprised at seeing” Elizabeth Bishop Traveling 228
- “Why is your mouth all green?” Something Alive in May Swenson 239
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PART THREE
- “care in such a world” Earth Home to William Stafford 251
- “The season’s ill” America’s Angst and Robert Lowell’s 259
- “that witnessing presence” Life Illumined Around Denise Levertov 266
- “the tree making us/look again” Shirley Kaufman’s Roots in the Air 275
- “that the rock might see” News of the North from John Haines 282
- “asking for my human breath” Trust in Maxine Kumin 290
- “What are you doing out here/this windy” Wind in the Reeds in the Voice of A. R. Ammons 294
- “between the earth and silence” W. S. Merwin’s Motion of Mind 301
- “bear blood” and “Blackberry Eating” Zest of Galway Kinnell 309
- “Kicking the Leaves” Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon at Eagle Pond Farm 318
- “I dared not cast//But silently cast” Ted Hughes Capturing Pike 327
- “the still pond and the egrets beating home” Derek Walcott, First to See Them 335
- “Just imagine” Can Poetry Save the Earth? 355
- Sources 359
- Text Credits 373
- Acknowledgments 378
- Index 381
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations xi
- Preface The Poetry of Earth Is Never Dead xiii
- Introduction Care in Such a World 1
-
PART ONE
- “stony rocks for the conies” Singing Ecology unto the Lord 19
- “Western wind, when will thou blow” Anon Was an Environmentalist 28
- “The stationary blasts of waterfalls” Blake, the Wordsworths, and the Dung 34
- “The white Eddy-rose . . . obstinate in resurrection” Coleridge Imagining 39
- “last oozings hours by hours” John Keats Eking It Out 46
- “Its only bondage was the circling sky” John Clare at Home in Helpston 56
- “Nature was naked, and I was also” Adamic Walt Whitman 64
- “Earth’s most graphic transaction” Syllables of Emily Dickinson 75
- “sick leaves . . . storm-birds . . . rotten rose . . . rain-drop” Nature Shadowing Thomas Hardy 88
- “freshness deep down things” The World Charged by Gerard Manley Hopkins 94
- “O honey bees,/Come build in the empty house of the stare” Nature Versus History in W. B. Yeats 104
-
PART TWO
- “strangeness from my sight” Robert Frost and the Fun in How You Say a Thing 115
- “white water rode the black forever” Frost and the Necessity of Metaphor 123
- “Larks singing over No Man’s Land” England Thanks to Edward Thomas, 1914–1917 130
- “the necessary angel of earth” Wings of Wallace Stevens 136
- “broken/seedhusks” Reviving America with William Carlos Williams 141
- “source then a blue as” Williams and the Environmental News 149
- “room for me and a mountain lion” D. H. Lawrence in Taormina and Taos 162
- “not man/Apart” Ocean, Rock, Hawk, and Robinson Jeffers 170
- “submerged shafts of the//sun,/split like spun/glass” Marianne Moore’s Fantastic Reverence 176
- “There, there where those black spruces crowd” To Steepletop and Ragged Island with Edna St. Vincent Millay 184
- “Gale sustained on a slope” Pablo Neruda at Machu Picchu 194
- “the wild/braid of creation/trembles” Stanley Kunitz—His Nettled Field, His Dune Garden 202
- “Bright trout poised in the current” Things Whole and Holy for Kenneth Rexroth 211
- “I swayed out on the wildest wave alive” Theodore Roethke from Greenhouse to Seascape 216
- “That they are there!” George Oppen’s Psalm of Attentiveness 223
- “surprised at seeing” Elizabeth Bishop Traveling 228
- “Why is your mouth all green?” Something Alive in May Swenson 239
-
PART THREE
- “care in such a world” Earth Home to William Stafford 251
- “The season’s ill” America’s Angst and Robert Lowell’s 259
- “that witnessing presence” Life Illumined Around Denise Levertov 266
- “the tree making us/look again” Shirley Kaufman’s Roots in the Air 275
- “that the rock might see” News of the North from John Haines 282
- “asking for my human breath” Trust in Maxine Kumin 290
- “What are you doing out here/this windy” Wind in the Reeds in the Voice of A. R. Ammons 294
- “between the earth and silence” W. S. Merwin’s Motion of Mind 301
- “bear blood” and “Blackberry Eating” Zest of Galway Kinnell 309
- “Kicking the Leaves” Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon at Eagle Pond Farm 318
- “I dared not cast//But silently cast” Ted Hughes Capturing Pike 327
- “the still pond and the egrets beating home” Derek Walcott, First to See Them 335
- “Just imagine” Can Poetry Save the Earth? 355
- Sources 359
- Text Credits 373
- Acknowledgments 378
- Index 381