
Inner Voices
Selected Poems, 1963-2003
By: Richard Howard
Paperback | 1 October 2005 | Edition Number 1
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440 Pages
20.96 x 14.61 x 3.18
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Richard Howard is a poet, scholar, teacher, critic, and translator. The author of more than a dozen books, including "Paper Trail: Selected Prose, 1965-2003," he is the recipient of both the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the National Book Award for translation. He teaches at Columbia University and is poetry editor of "The Paris Review." Winner of the "Los Angeles"" Times" Book Prize for Poetry
The poems of Richard Howard have long been celebrated for their compelling drama and graceful design--and for preserving, in their exquisitely wrought lines, human utterance at its most urbane. Here, in the first volume to draw together material from Howard's twelve books of poems, all students and scholars can fully appreciate the erudite nuances of his lyric poetry and the superb historical and emotional bravura of his dramatic monologues and imagined conversations among famous figures.
"Inner Voices" conveys a body of work that J.D. McClatchy has described as "a unique dramatic force fusing] the structural intimacies of voice with the elaborate situations of speech." This selection leaves no doubt as to how and why Howard has been "a powerful presence in American poetry for forty years" ("The New York Times Book Review"). "By my count, 80 of the 100-odd poems gathered here] take art or artists as their subject . . . In the landscape of American poetry no other poet, setting up a homestead for himself, has toiled so diligently to breed such a herd: poems as] creatures whose dam is art and whose sire is art. It's a formidable task, and I can't imagine anyone better equipped for it than Howard, who recently turned 75 and has been publishing poems and essays for more than 40 years . . . The chronological arrangement of this book] makes clear that Howard's poetry over the years has trended toward the more personal, direct, wryly plain-spoken. He follows a salutary impulse, and I pursued "Inner Voices" not merely with steady respect but with a] gratitude, a warmth, a coalescing affection."--Brad Leithauser, "The New York Times Book Review" "By my count, 80 of the 100-odd poems gathered here] take art or artists as their subject . . . In the landscape of American poetry no other poet, setting up a homestead for himself, has toiled so diligently to breed such a herd: poems as] creatures whose dam is art and whose sire is art. It's a formidable task, and I can't imagine anyone better equipped for it than Howard, who recently turned 75 and has been publishing poems and essays for more than 40 years . . . The chronological arrangement of this book] makes clear that Howard's poetry over the years has trended toward the more personal, direct, wryly plain-spoken. He follows a salutary impulse, and I pursued "Inner Voices" not merely with steady respect but with a] gratitude, a warmth, a coalescing affection."--Brad Leithauser, "The New York Times Book Review"
"In the last half-century, no American poet has been more instinctively, elegantly cosmopolitan than Richard Howard . . . Mr. Howard deserves to be known as the greatest "litterateur" in America . . . For Mr. Howard, poetry is] a "causerie" of master spirits across time and space. The majority of the poems in "Inner Voices" are responses to other poems, other artworks, other lives; when Mr. Howard is not meditating on a Nadar photograph or a Donatello sculpture, he is assuming the voice of John Ruskin, Edith Wharton, or others among the famous dead. No English-language poet since Browning has devoted himself so exclusively to the traditional dramatic monologue . . . Mr. Howard's language is] always baroque, periphrastic, Jamesian."--Adam Kirsch, "The New York Sun"
"Reading these poems does not feel much like reading other contemporary poets; it feels like reading Henry James or Marianne Moore--uncompromising stylists who are therefore our most unflinching, most heartbreaking moralists. Like James and Moore, like Dickinson, Howard is an American original. Like theirs, his language is closest to home when it is most arcane. Like them, he makes the world in which he walks."--James Longenbach, "Boston Review"
"Richard Howard is an indispensable, unique poet, whose work instructs by delighting, and delights by instructing. This volume vindicates a lifetime's imaginings, and establishes him as Robert Browning's authentic heir at rendering the inner voices of the cultural past and present."--Harold Bloom
"If there is a literary paradise where one could imagine Baudelaire and Browning, Auden and Henry James, James Merrill and Gautier amiably conversing and declaring their views and tastes to one another, one would expect to hear the name of Richard Howard raised with warmth and enthusiastic satisfaction--for his deftness, his wit, his incomparable copiousness, his vast range of subjects, and his burnished intelligence. He has achieved a stature of eminence as a poet beyond challenge or dispute. "Inner Voices" is a wonder."--Anthony Hecht
" Howard is] our era's Robert Browning. No other English-language poet since Browning has written so many dramatic monologues of such high quality. Like Browning, Howard chooses artists and art as the personae and subjects of many of his poems; no wonder, perhaps, for a poet who says that one poem he most wishes he had written is Browning's 'My Last Duchess' . . . While he modernly dispenses with rhyme and meter, Howard shapes his poems by other means, retaining the rhythms and swing of intelligent talk and the look of traditional verse on the page. He is as rich and as ever-fresh as Browni
Industry Reviews
"A long-awaited and meticulously chosen selection of the work of one of our few poetic masters." --John Hollander
"This volume . . . establishes [Howard] as Robert Browning's authentic heir at rendering the inner voices of the cultural past and present." --Harold Bloom
"Inner Voices is a wonder." --Anthony Hecht
"Howard's entire project is one of recovery, the exquisitely American need to create what Van Wyck Brooks called . . . a usable past . . . The very expanse of his sentences, their twist and torque, is an American dream of plentitude." --James Longenbach, Boston Review
| Quantities | |
| L'Invitation au Voyage | p. 3 |
| Sandusky-New York | p. 5 |
| Damages | |
| A Far Cry After a Close Call | p. 11 |
| Seeing Cousin Phyllis Off | p. 13 |
| Bonnard: A Novel | p. 15 |
| The Author of Christine | p. 18 |
| An Old Dancer | p. 21 |
| Untitled Subjects | |
| 1801: Among the Papers of the Envoy to Constantinople | p. 25 |
| 1851: A Message to Denmark Hill | p. 28 |
| 1881: A Beatification | p. 33 |
| 1889: Alassio | p. 36 |
| 1824-1889 | p. 42 |
| November, 1889 | p. 44 |
| 1890: Further Echoes of the Late Lord Leighton | p. 57 |
| 1891: An Idyll | p. 59 |
| 1897 | p. 63 |
| 1907: A Proposal from Paris | p. 67 |
| 1915: A Pre-Raphaelite Ending, London | p. 73 |
| Findings | |
| Beyond Words | p. 81 |
| From Tarragona | p. 83 |
| Giovanni Da Fiesole on the Sublime, or Fra Angelico's Last Judgment | p. 86 |
| From Beyoglu | p. 88 |
| Two-Part Inventions | |
| After the Facts | p. 95 |
| Infirmities [from Talking Cures] | p. 104 |
| The Lesson of the Master | p. 114 |
| A Natural Death | p. 137 |
| Fellow Feelings | |
| Decades | p. 157 |
| Personal Values | p. 162 |
| Howard's Way | p. 164 |
| The Giant on Giant-Killing | p. 169 |
| Vocational Guidance | p. 172 |
| Venetian Interior, 1889 | p. 176 |
| Purgatory, formerly Paradise | p. 180 |
| Misgivings | |
| Thebais | p. 187 |
| A Commission | p. 191 |
| Homage to Nadar | p. 194 |
| Charles Garnier | p. 194 |
| Sarah Bernhardt | p. 195 |
| Victor Hugo | p. 197 |
| Honore Daumier | p. 198 |
| Jacques Offenbach | p. 200 |
| Gioachino Rossini | p. 201 |
| Richard Wagner | p. 203 |
| Charles Baudelaire | p. 204 |
| Edmond and Jules de Goncourt | p. 206 |
| Gustave Dore | p. 207 |
| Theophile Gautier | p. 209 |
| George Sand | p. 210 |
| Nadar | p. 212 |
| Lining Up | |
| Lining Up | p. 217 |
| On Hearing Your Lover Is Going to the Baths Tonight | p. 221 |
| Carrion (continued) | p. 223 |
| At the Monument to Pierre Louys | p. 226 |
| Ithaca: The Palace at Four a.m. | p. 229 |
| Cygnus cygnus to Leda | p. 232 |
| Telemachus | p. 234 |
| Move Still, Still So | p. 237 |
| No Traveller | |
| Even in Paris | p. 247 |
| Love Which Alters | p. 272 |
| Concerning K | p. 275 |
| Oracles | p. 278 |
| Like Most Revelations | |
| Occupations | p. 303 |
| Poem Beginning with a Line by Isadora Duncan | p. 313 |
| A Lost Art | p. 316 |
| For Robert Phelps, Dead at Sixty-six | p. 320 |
| Like Most Revelations | p. 324 |
| Writing Off | p. 325 |
| For James Boatwright, 1937-88 | p. 329 |
| For David Kalstone, 1932-86 | p. 332 |
| Homage | p. 336 |
| To the Tenth Muse | p. 338 |
| Trappings | |
| Dorothea Tanning's Cousins | p. 345 |
| Nikolaus Mardruz to Ferdinand, Count of Tyrol, 1565 | p. 347 |
| Mrs. Eden in Town for the Day | p. 354 |
| Homage to Antonio Canaletto | p. 356 |
| Family Values I | p. 360 |
| Family Values II | p. 363 |
| Family Values III | p. 366 |
| The Job Interview | p. 369 |
| For Mona Van Duyn, Going On | p. 372 |
| Lee Krasner: Porcelain, a Collage | p. 375 |
| A Sibyl of 1979 | p. 377 |
| The Manatee | p. 379 |
| Les Travaux d'Alexandre | p. 381 |
| Among the Missing | p. 383 |
| Our Spring Trip | p. 384 |
| Henri Fantin-Latour: Un Coin de table, 1873 | p. 388 |
| At Sixty-five | p. 390 |
| Talking Cures | |
| Close Encounters of Another Kind | p. 395 |
| Knowing When to Stop | p. 397 |
| Colossal | p. 401 |
| Success | p. 403 |
| The Masters on the Movies | p. 405 |
| Now, Voyager (1942) | p. 405 |
| Lost Horizon (1937) | p. 406 |
| Woman of the Year (1942) | p. 408 |
| King Kong (1933) | p. 409 |
| Queen Christina (1933) | p. 410 |
| Keeping | p. 412 |
| Portrait in Pastel of the Volunteer Friedrich-August Klaatsch, 1813 | p. 414 |
| Hanging the Artist | p. 417 |
| Elementary Principles at Seventy-two | p. 420 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780374529901
ISBN-10: 0374529906
Published: 1st October 2005
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 440
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: FARRAR STRAUSS GIROUX 3PL
Country of Publication: US
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 20.96 x 14.61 x 3.18
Weight (kg): 0.54
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