This volume brings together sixteen essays on British, Irish and
American poets from the late nineteenth century to the present day. It
offers a series of entertaining and compelling readings of the lives and
works of Gerard Manley Hopkins, W.B. Yeats, Edward Thomas, T.S. Eliot,
Hart Crane, Elizabeth Bishop, James Schuyler, Allen Ginsberg, John
Ashbery, Ted Hughes and Paul Muldoon among others.
Arranged chronologically, the essays present a wide-ranging and
sophisticated narrative that takes the reader from the first stirrings
of modernism through to the dynamic experiments of the present day. A
number of essays attend to particular artistic alignments. One explores
the relationship between Wallace Stevens and the unjustly neglected
English poet Nicholas Moore, another the close friendship between James
Schuyler and the painter Fairfield Porter, while a third contends that
the lyrics, music and career of Bob Dylan unwittingly illustrate many of
the key tenets of the great nineteenth-century essayist Ralph Waldo
Emerson.