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Richard Eberhart (1904–2005)

Author of Selected poems, 1930-1965

38+ Works 173 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Born in Minnesota and educated at Dartmouth College and Cambridge (on a Rhodes Scholarship) and Harvard universities, Richard Eberhart has served as consultant in poetry at the Library of Congress (1959-66), and has won the Bollingen Prize (1962) and the Pulitzer Prize (1966). He is a member of the show more National Institute of Arts and Letters. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the name: Richard Eberhart

Works by Richard Eberhart

Selected poems, 1930-1965 (1965) 25 copies
Selected poems (1951) 9 copies
Collected Poems 1930-1986 (1988) 8 copies
The quarry, new poems (1964) 7 copies
Of Poetry and Poets (1979) 5 copies
Shifts of being; poems (1968) 5 copies
Maine Poems (1988) 5 copies

Associated Works

Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 926 copies
A Pocket Book of Modern Verse (1954) — Contributor, some editions — 446 copies
The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart: A Poetry Anthology (1992) — Contributor — 393 copies
The Faber Book of Modern Verse (1936) — Contributor, some editions — 289 copies
American Religious Poems: An Anthology (2006) — Contributor — 163 copies
The Faber Book of Beasts (1997) — Contributor — 141 copies
Poets of World War II (2003) — Contributor — 135 copies

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Reviews

Richard Eberhart is my favorite contemporary poet, and this collection of all his published poems over a fifty-six year period is worth the read. There are a few weak poems, but they are limited to Eberhart's later career, and he later made up for them in his splendid volume, Maine Poems. Eberhart believed in the old Greek idea of the "divine madness" of the poet, and that what arose from the creative impulse did not require revision--thus much of his poetry is his original draft of the work. His poetry deals with universal themes--nature, God, childhood, growing up, and death--and though it skirts the border of over-abstraction, his poems manage, for the most part, to maintain their connection to the concrete world of experience. The anthology includes Eberhart's justly famous 1934 poem, "The Groundhog," and his 1944 poem, "The Fury of Aerial Bombardment." My personal favorite, concerning the loss of childhood, is "If I Could Only Live at the Pitch that is Near Madness." In this poem, childhood is "violent, vivid, and of infinite possibility," yet that stage is transcended when adulthood intervenes, when "....a realm of complexity came / Where nothing is possible but necessity / And the truth waiting there like a red babe."
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mpotts | Sep 20, 2018 |
not exactly great poetry, but with a sort of hard disciplne that compels respect; some intellectual, some descriptive; notable for using traditinal forms --a notable sestina with the envoi 'No matter what o I have no peace/NO matter what man does he has no ease/Heaven and hell are changeless when I die."
 
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antiquary | Dec 26, 2011 |

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Works
38
Also by
22
Members
173
Popularity
#123,688
Rating
4.0
Reviews
2
ISBNs
23

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