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New Poems by D. H. Lawrence
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New Poems (edition 1918)

by D. H. Lawrence

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251918,384 (3.25)1
D.H. Lawrence: New Poems Edited with an introduction by Margaret Elvy D.H. Lawrence's 1918 book of poetry is reprinted in a new edition, with illustrations and a note on Lawrence and suggestions for further reading. In the introduction to the American edition of New Poems, Lawrence wrote: Let me feel the mud and the heavens in my lotus. Let me feel the heavy, silting, sucking mud, the spinning of sky winds. Let me feel them both in purest contact, the nakedness of sucking weight, nakedly passing radiance. Give me nothing fixed, set, static. Don't give me the infinite or the eternal: nothing of infinity, nothing of eternity. Give me the still, white seething, the incandescence and the coldness of the incarnate moment: the moment, the quick of all change and haste and opposition: the moment, the immediate present, the Now. The immediate moment is not a drop of water running downstream. It is the source and issue, the bubbling up of the stream. Here, in this instant moment, up bubbles the stream of time, out of the wells of futurity, flowing on to the oceans of the past. The source, the issue, the creative quick. There is poetry of this immediate present, instant poetry, as well as poetry of the infinite past and the infinite future. The seething poetry of the incarnate Now is supreme, beyond even the everlasting of the before and after. British Poets Series. Bibliography, illustrations and notes. 96pp. www.crmoon.com… (more)
Member:TELawrence
Title:New Poems
Authors:D. H. Lawrence
Info:London, Secker
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New Poems by D. H. Lawrence

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A magnificent and inspiring collection of poems by the famed author D.H Lawrence. Previously, I had read none of his poetry at all (and was doubtful that there would be anything of value) and I'm gladly surprised that I was proven wrong. The lines are carefully written and flow seamlessly together in a blend of flower-like intricacy that forms and aides the whole in its bearing. There are many lines that are wonderful, beatific and impressive. For those interested in olden poetry, this is not one to be missed.

4 stars- and rightfully so. ( )
  DanielSTJ | Jun 24, 2019 |
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D.H. Lawrence: New Poems Edited with an introduction by Margaret Elvy D.H. Lawrence's 1918 book of poetry is reprinted in a new edition, with illustrations and a note on Lawrence and suggestions for further reading. In the introduction to the American edition of New Poems, Lawrence wrote: Let me feel the mud and the heavens in my lotus. Let me feel the heavy, silting, sucking mud, the spinning of sky winds. Let me feel them both in purest contact, the nakedness of sucking weight, nakedly passing radiance. Give me nothing fixed, set, static. Don't give me the infinite or the eternal: nothing of infinity, nothing of eternity. Give me the still, white seething, the incandescence and the coldness of the incarnate moment: the moment, the quick of all change and haste and opposition: the moment, the immediate present, the Now. The immediate moment is not a drop of water running downstream. It is the source and issue, the bubbling up of the stream. Here, in this instant moment, up bubbles the stream of time, out of the wells of futurity, flowing on to the oceans of the past. The source, the issue, the creative quick. There is poetry of this immediate present, instant poetry, as well as poetry of the infinite past and the infinite future. The seething poetry of the incarnate Now is supreme, beyond even the everlasting of the before and after. British Poets Series. Bibliography, illustrations and notes. 96pp. www.crmoon.com

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