Directly or obliquely, while reading Gibbon or shopping for toys at F.
A. O. Schwarz, Slavitt addresses, invokes, or simply enjoys the
civilization that has been the poet's true subject from the time of the
wandering bards. Upon the foundation of technical mastery, he has begun
to build an oeuvre, to assert himself, and, with insouciance and
gaiety, to grow into his majority.
Originally published in 1965.
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