GONE TO EARTH brings to light, late in the long, distinguished career
of poet Eleanor Wilner, her early uncollected poems--an unveiling of the
first stages of a vital, imaginative process, in whose evocative,
imagistic landscapes is enacted a drama of emergence from entrapment. In
the often-painful drama of new birth, from the deadly strictures and
oppressions of the older social forms, come the living forces
undermining them--new life seeded out of a decaying order: "a wet nose /
breaks the earth, and sniffs the river air." Written during the poet's
immersion in the civil rights movement and the protests against the
Vietnam War, an inner liberating struggle is tuned to a collective
channel where communal memory and vision are undergoing transformation.