A literary sanctuary for what Shakespeare called "sessions of sweet
silent thought," this exquisite gathering of poems speaks to the
consolations of solitude. Here is Wordsworth wandering "lonely as a
cloud"; Poe confiding "all I loved, I loved alone"; Yeats's communion
with "the deep heart's core"; and Han Shan's heart of a hermit, "clean
as a white lotus." From Sir Edward Dyer's "My Mind to Me a Kingdom Is,"
to the spiritual searching of the Transcendentalists, to the meditative
verse of Jorie Graham, some of the most indelible poems from every time
and culture have grown out of the aloneness inherent in the poet's art.
The poems collected here, whether reflecting on the soul or on nature,
addressing an absent loved one, or honoring the self, form a book of
respite and contemplation, and a beautiful tribute to the interior life.