Can Poetry Save the Earth?
eBook - PDF

Can Poetry Save the Earth?

A Field Guide to Nature Poems

  1. 436 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Can Poetry Save the Earth?

A Field Guide to Nature Poems

About this book

At a time of environmental crises, poetry can reawaken us to the beauty and fragility of our natural world.

Poems vivifying nature have gripped people for centuries. From Biblical times to the present day, poetry has continuously drawn us to the natural world. In this thought-provoking book, John Felstiner explores the rich legacy of poems that take nature as their subject, and he demonstrates their force and beauty. In our own time of environmental crises, he contends, poetry has a unique capacity to restore our attention to our environment in its imperiled state. And, as we take heed, we may well become better stewards of the earth.

In forty brief and lucid chapters, Felstiner presents those voices that have most strongly spoken to and for the natural world. Poets - from the Romantics through Whitman and Dickinson to Elizabeth Bishop and Gary Snyder - have helped us envision such details as ocean winds eroding and rebuilding dunes in the same breath, wild deer freezing in our presence, and a person carving initials on a still-living stranded whale.

Sixty color and black-and-white images, many seen for the first time, bear out visually the environmental imagination this book discovers - a poetic legacy more vital now than ever.

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Information

Year
2009
Edition
1
eBook ISBN
9780300155532

Table of contents

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

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