Wagoner, David - John Hughes (essay date 1972)
John Hughes (essay date 1972)
SOURCE: A review of Riverbed, in The Saturday Review, Vol. 55, February 26, 1972, p. 62.
[In the following essay, Hughes praises Wagoner's ability to convey the landscape and the processes of individual consciousness through the metaphorical use of natural phenomena.]
In Riverbed, David Wagoner, a poet of the Pacific Northwest, has broken through to the metaphysical Northwest Passage sought for so frequently in his four previous books of poetry. He has eschewed that less arduous route to the unconscious mind which has been championed by Pound, Lawrence, James Dickey, and other liturgists of pseudoinstinctive spontaneity. Instead, Wagoner has followed Robert Frost amidst the Heraclitean wonders of the “West-Running Brook,” as can be seen from the title poem of this new collection:
We walk on round stones, all flawlessly bedded, Where water drags the cracked dome...
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Criticism
- Richard Howard (essay date 1965)
- Robert Boyers (essay date 1970)
- John Hughes (essay date 1972)
- Laurence Lieberman (essay date 1977)
- Arthur Oberg (essay date 1977)
- Donald Hall (essay date 1979)
- R. W. Flint (essay date 1980)
- Jarold Ramsey (essay date 1980)
- Robert Peters (essay date 1981)
- Steven Ratiner (essay date 1981)
- Justin Askins (essay date 1984)
- Sara McAulay (essay date 1984)
- Ron McFarland (essay date 1997)
- John Taylor (essay date 1998)
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