Anti-war poems by Denise Levertov, a passionate advocate of peace and
justice and one of the greatest American poets of the twentieth
century.
Denise Levertov achieved recognition as a poet at a young age, winning
the admiration of such older poets as T.S. Eliot and William Carlos
Williams. Though she initially drew a line between her poetic works and
her commitment to peace and justice, the Vietnam War inspired a change,
and at the time of her death in 1997, she was acclaimed not only for her
poetry, but also for her political engagement. Making Peace collects
Levertov's finest poems about war and peace, subjects which she
addresses with passion and nuance. Spanning the last three decades of
her life, their subjects range from Vietnam to the death-squads of El
Salvador to the first Gulf War. Often brutally vividin The Certainty she
writes, war / means blood spilling from living bodiesLevertov's poems
always have at their core her love for humanity, even as she registers
her horror at what humans do to one another.
Introduced by Levertov scholar Peggy Rosenthal, these poems mirror the
destruction that we witness today, but they also hold within them, as
Levertov writes, a small grain of hope.