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The Way Down

by John Burt

"For the sake of contraption (like Frost) and of character (like Robinson), John Burt will do a great deal, and his scope and scansion require a great deal, for his theme is nothing less than the reinvention of heroism (King Mark, Mary of Nazareth, St. Francis, Paolo and Francesca, Ariadne) and the invention of a new heroics (Woodrow Wilson, Willar

FORMAT
Hardcover
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

"For the sake of contraption (like Frost) and of character (like Robinson), John Burt will do a great deal, and his scope and scansion require a great deal, for his theme is nothing less than the reinvention of heroism (King Mark, Mary of Nazareth, St. Francis, Paolo and Francesca, Ariadne) and the invention of a new heroics (Woodrow Wilson, Willard Gibbs). As attentive to ekphrasis as to the sonnet's narrow room, Burt feels what he knows, and he knows that we can learn from the past only by repeating it. A grand achievement!"--Richard Howard. Almost all these poems are narrative, telling stories that turn on some small but crucial shift of sensibility. One hears in them a speaking rather than a singing voice, a voice which, for all its formality and gravity, remains oral and sociable, a voice which tells things rather than spins charms. Their predominant mood is lucid asperity, sometimes breaking out into the angry Calvinism they always barely keep down, sometimes striving to achieve a humane skepticism that always just eludes them.The book consists of two sections, one concerned with the cruxes and contradictions of private feeling, the other with the unraveling of the public world. Each section centers on a long narrative poem that culminates the building tensions of the poems that precede it and makes possible the resolutions that follow them. Sonnet I from "St. Francis and the Wolf" Saved at last, not at the last of me, I knelt two-legged, made of guttural air A little yelp to sound like human prayer. The saints were cautious, understandably. I took the cup, and managed not to drool, But dreamed the wine was blood, as I'd been taught, And vainly curbed the vain bent of my thought. I knew myself an angel, felt a fool. Could God have erred in making teeth and maw? Then for his glory I will bite the lamb Whose terror he transmogrifies to awe That I may do his service as I am, Till as I am I leap the mortal gulf To rage in heaven, a perfected wolf. Originally published in 1988. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.

Author Biography

John Burt is associate professor of English and American Literature, Brandeis University. He is the author of The Way Down and Robert Penn Warren and American Idealism. His poems have appeared in such literary periodicals as Salmagundi, Yale Review, and Paris Review.

Table of Contents

*FrontMatter, pg. i*Acknowledgments, pg. v*Contents, pg. ix*The Funeral Day, pg. 3*Three Songs from Paintings, pg. 4*Songs of Innocence, pg. 7*Ballet Academy, pg. 8*Ariadne, pg. 9*Paolo and Francesca, pg. 11*Waiting for Birds, pg. 12*On the Will to Believe, pg. 13*Learning the Table, pg. 14*Teratocarcinoma, pg. 15*The Homecoming of Bran, pg. 16*King Mark's Dream, pg. 18*From the Diary of Willard Gibbs, pg. 19*Photograph from Luzon, 1899, pg. 21*His Kind-Hearted Woman, pg. 23*Leonce Pontellier, pg. 25*Rich Blind Minotaur Led by a Girl, pg. 43*Winter: Hunters in Snow, pg. 44*In the Subway, pg. 45*After the Thunderstorm, pg. 46*The Zeppelin Watchers, pg. 51*Robert Falcon Scott Enters Paradise, pg. 53*The Plague-Maiden, pg. 54*Andrew Ramsay at the Somme, pg. 56*Plains of Peace, pg. 57*Sonnets for Mary of Nazareth, pg. 66*Nocturne, pg. 69*St. Francis and the Wolf, pg. 70*Trucks on a Hill in Winter, pg. 72*Thomaston Dam, pg. 73*Notes, pg. 75

Long Description

"For the sake of contraption (like Frost) and of character (like Robinson), John Burt will do a great deal, and his scope and scansion require a great deal, for his theme is nothing less than the reinvention of heroism (King Mark, Mary of Nazareth, St. Francis, Paolo and Francesca, Ariadne) and the invention of a new heroics (Woodrow Wilson, Willard Gibbs). As attentive to ekphrasis as to the sonnet's narrow room, Burt feels what he knows, and he knows that we can learn from the past only by repeating it. A grand achievement!"--Richard Howard. Almost all these poems are narrative, telling stories that turn on some small but crucial shift of sensibility. One hears in them a speaking rather than a singing voice, a voice which, for all its formality and gravity, remains oral and sociable, a voice which tells things rather than spins charms. Their predominant mood is lucid asperity, sometimes breaking out into the angry Calvinism they always barely keep down, sometimes striving to achieve a humane skepticism that always just eludes them.The book consists of two sections, one concerned with the cruxes and contradictions of private feeling, the other with the unraveling of the public world. Each section centers on a long narrative poem that culminates the building tensions of the poems that precede it and makes possible the resolutions that follow them. Sonnet I from "St. Francis and the Wolf" Saved at last, not at the last of me, I knelt two-legged, made of guttural air A little yelp to sound like human prayer. The saints were cautious, understandably. I took the cup, and managed not to drool, But dreamed the wine was blood, as I'd been taught, And vainly curbed the vain bent of my thought. I knew myself an angel, felt a fool. Could God have erred in making teeth and maw? Then for his glory I will bite the lamb Whose terror he transmogrifies to awe That I may do his service as I am, Till as I am I leap the mortal gulf To rage in heaven, a perfected wolf. Originally published in 1988. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.

Details

ISBN0691632235
Author John Burt
Short Title WAY DOWN
Pages 90
Publisher Princeton University Press
Language English
ISBN-10 0691632235
ISBN-13 9780691632230
Media Book
Format Hardcover
DEWEY 811.54
Residence US
Birth 1955
Imprint Princeton University Press
Place of Publication New Jersey
Country of Publication United States
Affiliation Brandeis University
Illustrations black & white illustrations
Translated from English
NZ Release Date 2016-04-19
US Release Date 2016-04-19
Year 2016
Publication Date 2016-04-19
Alternative 9780691067278
Audience Tertiary & Higher Education
UK Release Date 2016-04-19
AU Release Date 2016-06-27
Series Princeton Legacy Library

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