Donald Davie's poems are here arranged chronologically from the 1950s to
the beginning of the 1990s. Taken together, the poems display that
reverence for the distinctive qualities of the English language which
has earned him a name as one of Britain's finest living poets.
Davie's voice--judgemental, ironic, epigrammatic, humorous,
self-lacerating--speaks always with reference to an unhuman
perpendicular standard that itself goes unquestioned. It is not a
standard of Beauty or Truth; Davie is a poet of the third member of the
Platonic triad, Justice.--Helen Vendler, The New Yorker
[Davie's poems] are on the quiet side, often casual and musing in mood
and tone; determined to resist large gestures of assent or denial. .
.Donald Davie may just be the best English poet-critic of our
time.--William Pritchard, The New Republic
Donald Davie's Collected Poems does more than mark the culmination of
one of the most distinguished careers in post-war British poetry; it is
the autobiographical journey of a living poet at the height of his
creative powers and the mastery of his craft. Davie is considered the
most important and valuable contemporary link between poetry in England
and America.--Sarah E. McNeil, Little Rock Free Press