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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Donald Hall
سری:
ISBN (شابک) : 9781567926965, 9781567926958
ناشر: David R. Godine, Publisher
سال نشر: 2021
تعداد صفحات:
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 2 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Old Poets: Reminiscences and Opinions به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب شاعران قدیمی: خاطرات و آراء نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
"Old Poets is an indispensable jewel."
—Washington Post
"An astonishing array of encounters...Hall's observations are
shrewd and generous."
—Boston Globe
Intimate portraits of great poets in old age,
giving new insight into their work and their lives, and
context to the often flawless art created by flawed human
beings. The best of themselves endure, and the old poets'
existence and endurance gives readers courage to pursue their
own vision.
Donald Hall (Essays After Eighty and A Carnival of
Losses: Notes Nearing Ninety) knew a great deal about
work, about poetry, and about age. Each of those things come
together in this unique collection. We hear about Robert
Frost as Hall knew him: vain and cruel, a man possessed by
guilt. But, as Hall writes, "The poet who survives is the
poet to celebrate; the human being who confronts darkness and
defeats it is the one to admire. For all his vanity, Robert
Frost is admirable: He looked into his desert places,
confronted his desire to enter the oblivion of the snowy
woods, and drove on."
Hall's essays are once both intimate portraits and learned
treatises. He takes us on a pub crawl through the Welsh
countryside with the word-mad Dylan Thomas; to the Faber
& Faber office of T. S. Eliot, who had discovered more
happiness in age than in youth; to a reading where Robert
Frost's public persona hid the truth; to Brooklyn for lunch
with the enigmatic Marianne Moore; and to Italy and for a
visit with the notorious Ezra Pound. By the time Hall met
them, each poet was, he observed, "old enough to have
detached from ongoing poetry, to feel alien to the ambitions
of the grandchildren."
Also included are portraits of the poets who taught Hall as a
writer: the unfailingly kind Archibald MacLeish and Yvor
Winters, from whom he learned the most about poetry. Along
the way are observations about many other poets and the
literary cultures that sustained them.
Contents include: "Vanity, Fame, Love, and Robert Frost,"
"Dylan Thomas and Public Suicide," "Notes on T. S. Eliot,"
"Rocks and Whirlpools: Archibald MacLeish and Yvor Winters,"
"Marianne Moore: Valiant and Alien," and "Fragments of Ezra
Pound."
For lovers of literature, this is a gorgeous remembrance and
likely to compel an immediate visit to the poetry section of
the nearest bookstore—as Hall writes, "Their presences
have been emblems in my life, and I remember these poets as
if I kept them carved in stone."