I have no interest in "literary history." Nor is the spurious taxonomy of "major" and "minor" poets of concern to me. At the risk of trying the patience of long-time readers, I am afraid I must repeat my First Poetic Principle: It is the individual poem that matters, not the poet. As I say, I am fond of "The Trees at Night." I understand the objections that might be forthcoming from moderns: the poem is "sentimental" and "romantic," and its anthropomorphism ("The lonely lovely trees sigh"; "A few homing leaves drift by,/Poor souls bewildered and wan") places it beyond the pale. We have progressed beyond such things, the undeceived and knowing moderns say, all irony and self-regard. They are wrong, of course.Amen, brother.
Friday, September 20, 2019
Heart and spirit …
… First Known When Lost: Autumn Evening.
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