
Chapters into Verse
Poetry in English Inspired by the Bible, Volume 1: Genesis to Malachi
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

May 3, 1993
This unusual anthology catalogues the tradition of English poetry written in response to the Bible. And while it's somewhat puzzling that Atwan ( The Best American Essays ) and Wieder ( The Last Century: Selected Poems ) believe that this scriptural tradition has ``led a shadow existence'' and received short shrift compared to the classical, their book is unique: it provides both the passages from the King James version and the poems they inspired. Only poems of high merit, written with reference to specific passages, qualified for inclusion, which accounts for the omission of such poets as Shakespeare, Shelley and Stevens, who meet the first criterion but not the last. While excerpting may have been necessary in the case of long poems, the reader might have preferred to see the poem as a whole and the context of the author's scriptural allusions. This first volume covers the Book of Genesis to Malachi. The intent has been to rescue a neglected tradition, but Atwan and Wieder also provide a new perspective by linking poets as different as John Ashbery and Lord Byron--thrown together by their interest in Job.

May 1, 1993
%% This is a multi-book review: SEE also the title "Chapters into Verse." %% Here is a work that should delight many literate hearts. Editors Atwan and Wieder have collected poems of merit written in English that are based upon passages in the Bible. They mean to "finally bring the scriptural tradition [in English poetry] out of the shadows and into the light." So massive is their effort, surely they must succeed. The poets they have chosen date from the fourteenth century to the present, and the poems range stylistically from the elaborate stanzas of the seventeenth-century metaphysical poets to the free verse of Allen Ginsberg and Denise Levertov. Both Christian and Jewish poets are drawn upon, although several major names--Chaucer, Shakespeare, Marvell, Poe, Stevens--are totally absent because "they never or rarely partook of poetic inspiration from scripture." Brief sheaves of "Extracts" consisting of poems reflecting generally on the Bible lead off both volumes, while the other, far more numerous selections appear under the scriptural passages that particularly inspired them--e.g., James Schuyler's modern "Our Father" under Matthew 6:9-13 (the Lord's Prayer). The first volume corresponds to the Old Testament, the second to the New. It's hard to think why any English-language library wouldn't welcome and cherish this impressive anthology. ((Reviewed May 1, 1993))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1993, American Library Association.)
دیدگاه کاربران