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Set Thy Love in Order: New & Selected Poems gathers the work of
some thirty years, taken from Stephen Romer's four previous
collections, along with a substantial selection of new poems. The
title is a Dantesque imperative as old as the Trecento: Ordina
questo amore, O tu che m' ami - set thy love in order, o thou who
lovest me. Romer's central theme is encapsulated by these words,
and his prolonged and painstaking exploration of the
'intermittences of the heart', frequently carried out with a
Francophile self-consciousness and rueful wit, constitute so many
variations on the theme. Romer's New & Selected articulates the
constant oscillation between love, loss and longing, and the
religious desire for 'refuge' or 'higher things', and how
powerfully these can come to rhythm the life of the mind and the
emotions. His more recent work has included poems of love and
mourning for his parents, and elegies for friends. Derek Mahon
singled out Romer's first collection Idols for its 'emotional
candour and intellectual clarity', and since then the poet has
endeavoured to turn the light of the intellect (and the wit) on the
frequently chaotic and contradictory material of the heart.
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Love and War (Paperback)
David J. Constantine, Helen Constantine; Translated by Sarah Maguire, Marilyn Hacker, Stephen Romer
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R290
Discovery Miles 2 900
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This series publishes translations, original poems, reviews and
short essays that address such characteristic signs of our times as
exile, the movement of peoples, the search for asylum, and the
speaking of languages outside their native home.
One of France's most important modern poets, Eugene Guillevic
(1907-97) was born in Carnac in Brittany, and although he never
learned the Breton language, his personality is deeply marked by
his feeling of oneness with his homeland. His poetry has a
remarkable unity, driven by his desire to use words to bridge a
tragic gulf between man and a harsh and often apparently hostile
natural environment. For Guillevic, the purpose of poetry is to
arouse the sense of Being. In this poetry of description - where
entire landscapes are built up from short, intense texts - language
is reduced to its essentials, as words are placed on the page 'like
a dam against time'. When reading these poems, it is as if time is
being stopped for man to find himself again. Carnac (1961) marks
the beginning of Guillevic's mature life as a poet. A single poem
in several parts, it evokes the rocky, sea-bound, unfinished
landscape of Brittany with its sacred objects and its great silent
sense of waiting. The texts are brief but have a grave, meditative
serenity, as the poet seeks to effect balance and to help us 'to
make friends with nature' and to live in a universe which is
chaotic and often frightening. Introduction by Stephen Romer.
French-English bilingual edition. Bloodaxe Contemporary French
Poets: 9
An intensely personal and profoundly moving review of Bonnefoy’s
childhood memories. In December 2015, six months before his death
at the age of 93, Yves Bonnefoy concluded what was to be his last
major text in prose, L’écharpe rouge, translated here as The Red
Scarf. In this unique book, described by the poet as "an
anamnesis"—a formal act of commemoration—Bonnefoy undertakes,
at the end of his life, a profoundly moving exegesis of some
fragments written in 1964. These fragments lead him back to an
unspoken, lifelong anxiety: “My most troubling memory, when I was
between ten and twelve years old, concerns my father, and my
anxiety about his silence.” Bonnefoy offers an anatomy of his
father’s silence, and of the melancholy that seemed to take hold
some years into his marriage to the poet’s mother. At the
heart of this book is the ballad of Elie and Hélène, the poet’s
parents. It is the story of their lives together in the Auvergne,
and later in Tours, seen through the eyes of their son—the
solitary boy’s intense but inchoate experience, reviewed through
memories of the now elderly man. What makes The Red
Scarf indispensable is the intensely personal nature of the
material, casting its slant light, a setting sun, on all that has
gone before.
In this series, a contemporary poet selects and introduces a poet
of the past. By their choice of poems and by the personal and
critical reactions they express in their prefaces, the editors
offer insights into their own work as well as providing an
accessible and passionate introduction to some of the greatest
poets of our literature. Robert Herrick was born in London, in
1591, the seventh child of a prosperous goldsmith. He graduated
from St. John's College, Cambridge in 1617, and became a Cavalier
poet in the mould of Ben Jonson, mixing in literary circles in
London. He was ordained in 1623 and subsequently appointed by
Charles I to the living of Dean Prior in Devon, where he lived in
the reluctant seclusion of country life and wrote some of his best
work. In 1647, under the Commonwealth, Herrick was expelled from
the priory and returned to London, where he published his major
work, Hesperides, the following year. With the restoration of
Charles II in 1660 he was returned to Devon and died a bachelor in
1674.
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Poems, Volume I (Paperback)
Yves Bonnefoy; Edited by Anthony Rudolf, Stephen Romer, John Naughton; Translated by Anthony Rudolf, …
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R598
R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
Save R54 (9%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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France’s greatest poet of the last half century, Yves Bonnefoy
wrote many books of poetry and poetic prose, as well as celebrated
critical essays on literature and art (to which a second volume
will be devoted). At his death in 2016 aged ninety-three, he was
Emeritus Professor of Comparative Poetics at the Collège de
France. The selection for this volume (and the second one) was made
in close collaboration with the poet. The lengthy introduction by
John Naughton is a significant assessment of Bonnefoy’s
importance in French literature. Bonnefoy started out as a young
surrealist poet at the end of the Second World War and, for seven
decades, he produced poetry and prose of great, and changing, depth
and richness. In his lines we encounter `the horizon of a voice
where stars are falling, / Moon merging with the chaos of the
dead’. Fellow poet Philippe Jaccottet spoke of his abiding
gravité enflammée. Bonnefoy knew what translation demands, having
himself translated Shakespeare, Donne, Yeats, and Keats; Petrarch
and Leopardi from Italian; and, from Greek, George Seferis. This
volume is edited and translated by three of Bonnefoy’s long-time
translators –Anthony Rudolf, John Naughton, and Stephen Romer –
with contributions from Galway Kinnell, Richard Pevear, Beverley
Bie Brahic, Emily Grosholz, Susanna Lang, and Hoyt Rogers.
In December 2015, six months before his death at the age of 93,
Yves Bonnefoy concluded what was to be his last major text in
prose, L'echarpe rouge, translated here as The Red Scarf. In this
unique book, described by the poet as "an anamnesis"-a formal act
of commemoration-Bonnefoy undertakes, at the end of his life, a
profoundly moving exegesis of some fragments written in 1964. These
fragments lead him back to an unspoken, lifelong anxiety: "My most
troubling memory, when I was between ten and twelve years old,
concerns my father, and my anxiety about his silence." Bonnefoy
offers an anatomy of his father's silence, and of the melancholy
that seemed to take hold some years into his marriage to the poet's
mother. At the heart of this book is the ballad of Elie and Helene,
the poet's parents. It is the story of their lives together in the
Auvergne, and later in Tours, seen through the eyes of their
son-the solitary boy's intense but inchoate experience, reviewed
through memories of the now elderly man. What makes The Red Scarf
indispensable is the intensely personal nature of the material,
casting its slant light, a setting sun, on all that has gone
before.
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Prose (Paperback)
Yves Bonnefoy; Edited by Anthony Rudolf, Stephen Romer, John Naughton
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R889
R716
Discovery Miles 7 160
Save R173 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Yves Bonnefoy (1923-2016), a major poet, was equally a seminal
essayist and thinker. This companion volume to Yves Bonnefoy: Poems
contains what he regarded as his foundational essays, as well as a
generous selection from all periods. In his art criticism, as in
his literary essays, Bonnefoy manages that rare thing: to impart
metaphysical urgency to each discreet encounter with a painting or
a poem, born of his constant quest for intensity, for 'presence'.
Whether he is examining an early Byzantine fresco, a Shakespeare
play, a Bernini angel, a drawing by Blake, a poem by Rimbaud, the
exigency, the high seriousness and the challenge is the same: to
affirm presence, and finitude, against all forms of life-sapping
conceptual thought. If they cannot always deliver ecstasy or hope,
the great poets, argues Bonnefoy, are pledged to 'intensity as
such', sustained by 'une mélancolie ardente'.
'He had become the dandy of the unpredictable.' A quest for new
sensations, and an avowed desire to shock possessed the Decadent
writers of fin-de-siecle Paris. The years 1880-1900 saw an
extraordinary, hothouse flowering of talent, that produced some of
the most exotic, stylized, and cerebral literature in the French
language. While 'Decadence' was a European movement, its epicentre
was the French capital. On the eve of Freud's early discoveries,
writers such as Gourmont, Lorrain, Maupassant, Mirbeau, Richepin,
Schwob, and Villiers engaged in a species of wild analysis of their
own, perfecting the art of short fiction as they did so. Death and
Eros haunt these pages, and a polymorphous perversity by turns
hilarious and horrifying. Their stories teem with addicts, maniacs,
and murderers as they strive to outdo each other. This newly
translated selection brings together the very best writing of the
period, from lesser known figures as well as famous names.
Provocative and unsettling, these extraordinary, corrosive little
tales continue to cast a cold eye on the modern world. ABOUT THE
SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made
available the widest range of literature from around the globe.
Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship,
providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable
features, including expert introductions by leading authorities,
helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for
further study, and much more.
Since the publication of his first book in 1953, Yves Bonnefoy has
become one of the most important French poets of the postwar years.
At last, we have the long-awaited English translation of his
celebrated work "L'Arriere-Pays", which takes us to the heart of
his creative process and to the very core of his poetic spirit. In
his poem "The Convex Mirror," Bonnefoy writes: "Look at them down
there, at that crossroads, / They seem to hesitate, then go on."
The idea of the crossroads haunts Bonnefoy's work, as he is
troubled by the idea that the path not taken may lead to the
arriere-pays, a place of greater plenitude, and of more authentic
being - an "elsewhere in the absolute." Seized by this fear that
what he terms "presence" exists always somewhere else, a little
further on, Bonnefoy here sets out on a labyrinthine quest to find
traces of this "original place," which he locates not only in
objects of knowledge and experience as diverse as the deserts of
Asia, a hill fort in India, a church in Armenia, and the paintings
of Piero della Francesca but also, crucially, in the undivided
intensity of his experiences as a child. Written with a visionary
grace, "The Arriere-Pays" is a spiritual testament to art,
philosophy, and poetry. Enriched by a new preface by the poet, this
volume also includes three recent essays in which he returns to his
original account of an ethical and aesthetic haunting, one that
recounts the struggle between our instinct to idealize - what he
deems our eternal Platonism - and the equally strong need to combat
this and to be reconciled with our nature as finite beings, made of
flesh and blood, in the world of the here and now.
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