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BOOKS

The Poet in Solitude

SELECTED POEMS, by Walter de la Mare; Faber and Faber, English price 7/6.

(Reviewed by

James K.

Baxter

ETWEEN the nineteen-hun-dreds and now, there have been huge changes in life and literary thought. Even the rock under the shade of which a poet must pitch his tent, the knowledge of good and evil, seems at times to have shifted’ on its base. Where there are great changes two kinds of poets can best survive them-the brilliant improviser and the inveterate stoic. I suggest that Walter de la Mare, unlike most of his contemporaries, is the second kind of poet. The grief of knowledge and the knowledge of grief, expressed in the most sensuous and melodious language, has been his constant theme. His poetry is, under the draperies, a modern Book of Ecclesiastes. Those who love de la Mare’s poems, the school teachers and the pastoral sympathisers, will disagree with this judgment. The images of ice and fire, sun-

set rooms and haunted groves, appeal to them as the legitimate special province of poetry. Rather these images reflect de la Mare’s acutely honest charting of the unspoken fears of Everyman, fears of moral evil and spiritual isolationNectarous those flowers, yet with venom sweet. Thick-juiced with poison hang those fruits that shine Where thick phantasmal moonbeams Seneil and beat, And dark imaginations ripe the vine. Bethink thee: every enticing league thou wend ys Sm git the mark where life its bound ath Will lead aE at length where human pathways end And the dark enemy spreads his maddening net. It is a solitary view of experience, in which the poisonous Tree of Life tempts and betrays; countered only in de la Mare’s poetry by a real but over-spirit-ual Puritan Christianity. The child’s world also (from which he draws his hallucinatory imagery) is besieged by premonitions of evil, the poet himself being represented as a child who has somehow escaped the breaching violence of puberty, sealed in his sunset room of imagination, yet menaced: like the child by the fangs and claws of darkness, There is serenity in de la Mare’s

later work; but unlike Dylan Thomas, a poet whose vision of life is similarly obsessive and grounded in childhood, he has never come to speak of the "good dark." These matters are perhaps irrelevant to the evaluation of his poetic stature, which is indeed considerable. The volume presents an adequate selection of his work.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZLIST19550513.2.24

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Listener, Volume 32, Issue 824, 13 May 1955, Page 12

Word count
Tapeke kupu
407

BOOKS New Zealand Listener, Volume 32, Issue 824, 13 May 1955, Page 12

BOOKS New Zealand Listener, Volume 32, Issue 824, 13 May 1955, Page 12

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