To write or read a poem is often to think in distinctively poetic
ways--guided by metaphors, sound, rhythms, associative movement, and
more. Poetry's stance toward language creates a particular intelligence
of thought and feeling, a compressed articulation that expands inner
experience, imagining with words what cannot always be imagined without
them. Through translation, poetry has diversified poetic traditions, and
some of poetry's ways of thinking begin in the ancient world and remain
potent even now. In How Poems Think, Reginald Gibbons presents a rich
gallery of poetic inventiveness and continuity drawn from a wide range
of poets--Sappho, Pindar, Shakespeare, Keats, William Carlos Williams,
Marina Tsvetaeva, Gwendolyn Brooks, and many others. Gibbons explores
poetic temperament, rhyme, metonymy, etymology, and other elements of
poetry as modes of thinking and feeling. In celebration and homage,
Gibbons attunes us to the possibilities of poetic thinking.