Paz, Octavio - Helen Vendler (essay date 4 April 1988)
Helen Vendler (essay date 4 April 1988)
SOURCE: Vendler, Helen. “To Be a Sun Again.” New Yorker 64, no. 7 (4 April 1988): 97-101.
[In the following essay, Vendler offers a favorable review of the Collected Poems of Octavio Paz, 1957-1987.]
Nothing in the visible estrangement of poetry from prose is more astonishing than their estrangement in one person. Octavio Paz—Mexico's famous poet, born in 1914—is a torrential writer, whose successive books of prose and verse have enriched our century; while his prose is often circumstantial, historical, and evidential, his poetry is not. It is something else. Someone reading the verse as one reads prose might say, “Abstract, generalizing, unreal.” But someone reading the verse as one reads verse would say, “Musical, sensual, real.” When a single historical writer slips into two such different gears, some explanation is required. For Paz, the political real (present in all his essays)...
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Criticism
- Jason Wilson (essay date 1986)
- Helen Vendler (essay date 4 April 1988)
- J. D. McClatchy (essay date April 1989)
- Manuel Durán (essay date winter 1991)
- John Zubizarreta (essay date January 1991)
- Richard Poirier (essay date spring 1991)
- Julia A. Kushigian (essay date 1991)
- Timothy Clark (essay date 1992)
- Haider Ali Khan (essay date summer 1992)
- Ollie O. Oviedo (essay date 1992)
- Enrico Mario Santí (essay date spring 1995)
- John Zubizarreta (essay date summer 1995)
- Dean Rader (essay date fall 1997)
- Barbara Mujica (essay date August 1998)
- Manuel Durán (essay date winter 1999)
- Mario J. Valdés (essay date 1999)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date March-April 2000)
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