American First Editions


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Bliss Carman


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"One Summer, twenty years ago, a youth pitched his tent by the shores of a western lake and there lived alone for several months. It chanced that among his possessions there was a book of poems by Bliss Carman. Professor Shepard thus came under the spell of the poet. 'This book,' he writes, 'answered to deeper needs than any of which the boy was aware.' In the years which followed he continued to be an ardent admirer of Bliss Carman's poetry and in this scholarly and intimate study he combines the eager enthusiasm of boyhood with the sober and informed judgment of maturer years. In the 'Foreword' he relates the beginnings of his acquaintanceship with Bliss Carman's poetry when he discovered in one book the twin worlds of nature of art. 'Days' is the caption of the section of biographical facts. 'The Man' reveals something of the personality of the poet through his works. 'Works'--a comprehensive and illuminating survey of the chief volumes issued by the poet. 'Nature'--discusses aspects of the treatment of nature. 'Art' deals with the technique of the poet and contains interesting criticisms by Richard Hovey. 'Thought'--is a thoroughly sane examination of the intellectual content of Carman's poetry. 'Style' is treated with the very sensible predication that 'A poet's style is made of the self-same stuff and substance as his thought.'"--Book jacket.




American First Editions


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Canadian Bookman


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