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This section contains 216 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
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Critical Essay by Donald Hall
In Rexroth's poems the natural world, unchanged and changing, remains background to history and love, to enormity and bliss….
His politics of the individual separates him from the mass of Americans—and obviously from Stalinists of the left—and yet joins him to all human beings; it is a politics of love—and Rexroth is the poet of devoted eroticism….
His work for 40 years has moved among his passions for the flesh, for human justice and for the natural world. He integrates these loves in the long poems, and sometimes in briefer ones. "The Signature of All Things" may be the best of all. It is the strength of Rexroth's language that it proscribes nothing…. [His] is a poetry of experience and observation, of knowledge—and finally a poetry of wisdom. Nothing is alien to him.
Rexroth's characteristic rhythm moves from the swift and urgent to the slow and meditative, remaining continually powerful….
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This section contains 216 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
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