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Tag Archives: Lilacs
The Mystery of Oppen
This week I must say I was particularly fascinated with the simultaneously revealing and befuddling poems of George Oppen. Oppen was the poster-child of what came to be known as the “Objectivist” school of poetry, which has been categorized by a lack of … Continue reading
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Tagged Ambiguity, Contemporary Poetry, hope, Lilacs, nature, Nature Poetry, Transcendence, Walt Whitman, William Carlos Williams
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Neruda and Whitman and Forgetting
James’s recent and incisive post offers a brilliant reading of the many arguably un-Whitmanian energies in Neruda’s love poem #20. More generally, he voices a healthy dose of skepticism concerning the degree to which we might think of Neruda or any … Continue reading
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Tagged Contemporary Poetry, crisis and recovery, Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Lilacs, Martin Espada, Pablo Neruda, Walt Whitman
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And where are the lilacs?
Whitman’s lilacs are one of the most enduring poetic symbols of the modern age; lilacs in a poem are never just lilacs. Traditionally, lilacs signal the coming of Spring as one of the earliest blooming flowers and represent youthful innocence … Continue reading