Collected poems

Ellen Bryant Voigt, 1943-

Book - 2023

"In eight extraordinary volumes spanning five decades, Ellen Bryant Voigt has created a body of work distinguished by its formal precision, rigorous intelligence, and meticulous observation of nature, history, and domestic life. This definitive collection showcases the brilliant career of "a quintessential American elegist""--

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Subjects
Genres
Elegies (Poetry)
Poetry
Published
New York, N.Y. : W.W. Norton & Company [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Ellen Bryant Voigt, 1943- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
473 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 459) and indexes.
ISBN
9781324035329
  • Claiming Kin (1976)
  • Tropics
  • At the Edge of Winter
  • Animal Study
  • Black Widow
  • The Heart Is the Target
  • Delilah
  • Preparation
  • Snakeskin
  • Southern Artifact
  • American at Auschwitz
  • Stork
  • Suicides
  • Dialogue: Poetics
  • Song
  • For S.,
  • Farm Wife
  • "The Wife Takes a Child"
  • The Handmaiden
  • Gathering
  • Birthday Sestina
  • Claiming Kin
  • Sister
  • The Hen
  • The Feast of the Assumption of the Virgin
  • Damage
  • House
  • The Letter
  • April, 1945
  • The Waning Moon
  • Executioner
  • The Victim
  • The Burial
  • The Marriage
  • The Birth
  • The Drowned Man
  • Harvest
  • The Quickening
  • The Visit
  • All Souls' Day
  • The Forces of Plenty (1983)
  • The Spire
  • A Fugue
  • Jug Brook
  • The Medium
  • The Gymnast
  • Pastoral
  • The Spring
  • Why She Says No
  • The Diviner
  • Alba
  • For My Husband
  • A Marriage Poem
  • Exile
  • Blue Ridge
  • The Couple
  • Eurydice
  • Epithalamium
  • Quarrel
  • Year's End
  • Liebesgedicht
  • January
  • The Apology
  • Rescue
  • Talking the Fire Out
  • Daughter
  • Letter from Vermont
  • The Happiness Poems
  • The Bat
  • Sweet Everlasting
  • For My Mother
  • For My Father
  • The Lotus Flowers (1987)
  • The Last Class
  • Visiting the Graves
  • Feast Day
  • The Photograph
  • The Riders
  • The Chosen
  • The Trust
  • The Farmer
  • A Song
  • Short Story
  • Stone Pond
  • The Visitor
  • The Wide and Varied World
  • The Field Trip
  • Nocturne
  • Fairy Tale
  • Under Gemini
  • Good News
  • Amaryllis
  • Nightshade
  • At the Movie: Virginia, 1956
  • The Storm
  • The Cusp
  • The Pendulum
  • Frog
  • The Waterfall
  • Memorial Day
  • The Wish
  • Bright Leaf
  • The Fence
  • Equinox
  • Landscape, Dense with Trees
  • The Lotus Flowers
  • May
  • Dancing with Poets
  • Two Trees (1992)
  • First Song
  • Effort at Speech
  • At the Piano
  • Variations: At the Piano
  • After Keats
  • Self-Portrait at LaGuardia
  • The Harness
  • Thorn-Apple
  • Variations: Thorn-Apple
  • Two Trees
  • The Box
  • The Innocents
  • Soft Cloud Passing
  • Woman Who Weeps
  • The Soothsayer
  • Fish
  • Variations: The Innocents
  • Herzenlied
  • The Pond
  • The Letters
  • Gobelins
  • Song and Story
  • Kyrie (1995)
  • Shadow of Heaven (2002)
  • Winter Field
  • Largesse
  • Apple Tree
  • Winter Field
  • The Others
  • Practice
  • Himalaya
  • Lesson
  • High Winds Flare Up and the Old House Shudders
  • The Garden, Spring, The Hawk
  • The Art of Distance
  • Dooryard Flower
  • Horace: Ode I.xxxiv
  • Plaza del Sol
  • Anthropology
  • A Brief Domestic History
  • Long Marriage
  • Autumn in the Yard We Planted
  • Last Letter
  • Horace: Ode I.xxxvii
  • What I Remember of Larry's Dream of Yeats
  • Dooryard Flower
  • Messenger: New Poems (2006)
  • The Feeder
  • Deathbed
  • The Hive
  • Harvesting the Cows
  • Rubato
  • Redbud
  • The Tattered Dress
  • Prayer
  • Adagio
  • Messenger
  • Headwaters (2013)
  • Headwaters
  • Privet Hedge
  • Stones
  • Oak
  • My Mother
  • Owl
  • Milkmaid
  • Yearling
  • Cow
  • Fox
  • Noble Dog
  • Moles
  • Garter Snake
  • Groundhog
  • Hog-Nosed Skunk
  • Hound
  • Lost Boy
  • Maestro
  • Geese
  • Birch
  • Bear
  • Chameleon
  • Lament
  • Spring
  • Sleep
  • Larch
  • Roof
  • Storm
  • Acknowledgments
  • Dedications
  • Notes
  • Index of Titles
  • Index of First Lines
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

These poems, collected from eight books dating back to 1976, establish Voigt as one of the most proficient and accomplished poets writing today. Infusing narrative with lyric power, these precise, yet visceral entries engage with ordinary people in their strangeness, as well as with animals domesticated and wild. As a Virginia farmer's daughter reckons with the implicit racism of her childhood, she posits the unpleasantness as an "instructive poison" that can inoculate one against subscribing to such notions. No stranger to the brutalities of farming, she pictures the chaos of cows being prepared for slaughter: "one beast/ mounts another in a panic that looks erotic." Disrupted marriages proliferate; a betrayed wife's heart is a "hinged clam" with "an appetite for garbage." "Kyrie," a prescient sonnet sequence about the 1918--1919 flu epidemic, is sandwiched between more personal narratives, but each poem achieves, through earned emotion and vision, broader impact. A trained pianist since childhood, Voigt is a musician at heart and a formalist who rarely works in received forms. This rewarding and expansive work does justice to her commendable vision and ear. (Feb.)

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