Unlike Whitman, Dickinson, or Wordsworth, Frederick Goddard
Tuckerman (1821 1873) never wanted to start a revolution in poetry.
Nor did he like Longfellow or his friend Tennyson capture or ever
try to represent the spirit of his age. Yet he remains one of
America s most passionate, moving, and technically accomplished
poets of the nineteenth century: a New Englander through and
through, a poet of the outdoors, wandering fields and wooded
hillsides by himself, driven to poetry and the solitude of nature
by the loss of his beloved wife. This is the persona we encounter
again and again in Tuckerman s sonnets and stanzaic lyric
poetry.
Correcting numerous errors in previous editions, this is the
first reliable reading edition of Tuckerman s poetry. Ben Mazer has
painstakingly re-edited the poems in this selection from
manuscripts at the Houghton Library. Included in this generous
selection are several important poems omitted in "The Complete
Poems of Frederick Goddard Tuckerman." In his introduction to the
volume, Stephen Burt celebrates an extraordinary poet of mourning
and nature an anti-Transcendental who in many ways seems closer to
writers of our own century than to, say, Emerson or even Thoreau.
Readers who enjoy the verse of Richard Wilbur, Anthony Hecht, or
Mary Oliver will find much to admire in Tuckerman s poetry.
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