Abse, Dannie | John Mole (review date 1977)

John Mole (review date 1977)

SOURCE: Mole, John. “Digging for Rainbows.” Times Literary Supplement no. 3947 (18 November 1977): 48.

[In the following review, Mole describes Abse's poetry as humorous, compassionate, and ironic.]

Dannie Abse's Collected Poems is a substantial book. It displays a serious poet (“Yes, Madam, as a poet I do take myself seriously”) developing his characteristic sense of irony, and a style which managed to move rapidly from the artificiality of an early poem like “Epithalamion” to a mixture of plain speaking and sonorous elevation capable of expressing how “everything and everybody / are perplexed and perplexing, deeply unknown.” In “Letter to Alex Comfort” Dr. Abse comments on how his friend has “dug deep / into the wriggling earth for a rainbow with an honest spade” and those words might well serve to describe the progress of his own career as a poet. The honesty has been...

[The entire page is 1349 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the:

Lookup any word on eNotes with our dictionary. Highlight the word and press SHIFT + D for a definition, or SHIFT + T for a synonym.