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What Was Lost: Poems First edition
Herbert Morris
What Was Lost: Poems First edition
Herbert Morris
The first book in a decade from a poet whose blank verse speaks "with the precise qualifications of Henry James, and conveys the muted but implicit drama of Edward Hopper"--Anthony Hecht.. In this, his first collection since the acclaimed Little Voices of the Pears , Herbert Morris gathers fifteen recent poems in his two signature modes, the dramatic monologue and the meditative reverie. His subjects include a resplendent apricot gown once worn by Lillian Gish ("Chaplin enthralled, Griffith smitten, ecstatic"); a poignant human detail in Caravaggio's The Sacrifice of Isaac ; and a host of variations on the Peaceable Kingdom , the obsessive lifework of the painter Edward Hicks. Mr. Morris's blank verse, for decades now a glory of American poetry, here achieves a new level of mastery.
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | March 16, 2000 |
ISBN13 | 9781582430645 |
Publishers | Counterpoint |
Pages | 128 |
Dimensions | 157 × 15 × 231 mm · 335 g |
Language | English |
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