Wagoner, David - John Taylor (essay date 1998)
John Taylor (essay date 1998)
SOURCE: A review of Walt Whitman Bathing, in Poetry, Vol. 171, No., January, 1998, pp. 229–32.
[In the following essay, Taylor praises Wagoner for writing poetry that simultaneously celebrates self-transcendence and the “ontological durability” of certain “essential emotions.”]
One way of interpreting the adage “art is long, but life is short” is to point out the difficulty of attaining clarity. David Wagoner knows what this challenge implies, for Walt Whitman Bathing confirms once again his ability to arrive at an admirable transparency, without compromising stylistic nuance or philosophical scope. Even when gently ironic (see the touching “For a Woman Who Phoned Poetry Northwest Thinking It Was Poultry Northwest”), the man advances maskless, costume-less, bearing a precious gift: sincerity. His insights run deep and are expressed with a soft-spoken directness intimately...
[The entire page is 1051 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
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)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
