From the beginning I was drawn equally to those two primary streams of early modern poetry, which I tend to think of as the Styx and the Spoon. I cannot remember quite when or where I was when I encountered either of them for the first time. The earliest memory of the Styx, river of death, dream and forgetfulness, was in some old book [...]
Archive for the ‘Arthur Rackham’ Category
1. the two rivers: the Styx and the Spoon
Posted in Arthur Rackham, beauty, blank verse narratives, Edgar Lee Masters, Edwin Arlington Robinson, faery lore, farming, graveyards, John Keats, naturalism, River Styx, rivers, Robert Frost, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, shadows, sonnet, Spoon River, symbolism, Thomas Hardy, unconscious, Walter Crane, William Blake, William Wordsworth, tagged blank verse narratives, Edgar Lee Masters, graveyards, River Styx, sonnet, Spoon River, symbolism on May 31, 2008 | 1 Comment »

For each life, a different river
- . 1. The two rivers: the Styx and the Spoon
- . 2. By the oily Rock River: factory nights
- . 3. Along a wild stretch of the Calawah: wandering after Han-Shan
- . 4. The college above Keith Creek: defending the Romantics
- . 5. Bohemia on the Mississippi
- . 6. Shadows across the Spoon: midwestern gothic
- . 7. From the Spoon to the Marne: poems of my grandfather's war
- . 7b. Another tale from Spoon River: "The Revelation of Sam Hackett" — a pastoral parable of violence, war & the devil
- . 7c. Ruins on the Somme: a lost war poet rediscovered
- . 8. Along the stripling Thames: in search of the Scholar Gipsy
- . 9. By the banks of the Seine: paupers & Symbolists
- 10. The body in the river: hard-boiled sonnets
- 11. The river ran red: poetry wars
- 12. Submerged in the waters of Lethe


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Recent Posts
- Mr Chumbles returns to the hospital— under close watch
- Mr Chumbles returns to the garden
- Please help save Mr Chumbles’ eye
- Premature Spring
- An antidote to Christmas humbug
- In these days leading up to Christmas . . .
- Virginia de Courcey, relics: literary, political, philosophical writings, 1966-1986
- Late October, sweet disorder
- After three suicide attempts & a stint in the asylum, the poet Cowper retires to his Garden & the company of his rabbit
- hard times

Category Cloud
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- Joseph Marshall on Please help save Mr Chumbles’ eye
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- bj omanson on An antidote to Christmas humbug
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- Anonymous on . 7. From the Spoon to the Marne: poems of my grandfather’s war
- Kate on After three suicide attempts & a stint in the asylum, the poet Cowper retires to his Garden & the company of his rabbit
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Links
Herdsman's Watch: pastoral traditions in anthropology & the arts
Matthew Arnold Field, Oxford
Matthew Arnold, The Scholar Gipsy, and the Cumnor Hills
Friends of the Dymock Poets
Ivor Gurney Society
Tim Kendall's war poetry blog
Poetry of the First World War
The Wordsworth Center for the Study of Poetry
Wendell Berry
Vernal Equinox . . . Virginia de Courcey
Virginia de Courcey, relics: literary, political & philosophical writings, 1966-1986
In the Living Season . . . Marjorie A. Buettner
Dana Gioia
History and Lore of the Old World War: artifacts & odd bits from 1914-1918
Monongahela Books blog: specialists in American history & culture
Gas Wells on the Monongahela: hydro-fracking in the Monongahela watershed, a grassroots view


