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At the foundling hospital

Uniform Title
Poems. Selections
Title
At the foundling hospital / Robert Pinsky.
ISBN
9780374158118
0374158118
9780374715472
0374715475
Edition
First edition.
Publication
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016.
Physical Description
63 pages ; 22 cm
Notes
"Poems"--Jacket cover.
Summary
""Since the death of Robert Lowell in 1977, no single figure has dominated American poetry the way that Lowell, or before him Eliot, once did. But among the many writers who have come of age in our fin de siècle, none have succeeded more completely as poet, critic, and translator than Robert Pinsky."--James Longenbach, The Nation The poems in Robert Pinsky's At the Foundling Hospital consider personality and culture as improvised from loss: a creative effort so pervasive it is invisible. An extreme example is the abandoned newborn. At the Foundling Hospital of eighteenth-century London, in a benign and oddly bureaucratic process, each new infant was identified by a duly recorded token. A minimal, charged particle of meaning, the token might be a coin or brooch or thimble--or sometimes a poem, such as the one quoted in full in Pinsky's poem "The Foundling Tokens." A foundling may inherit less of a past than an orphan, but with a wider set of meanings. The foundling soul needs to be adopted, and it needs to be adaptive. In one poem, French and German appear as originally Creole tongues, invented by the rough needs of conquered peoples and their Roman masters. In another, creators from scorned or excluded groups--among them Irving Berlin, Quintus Horatius Flaccus, and W.E.B. Du Bois--speak, as does the Greek tragic chorus, in the first-person singular. In these poems, a sometimes desperate, perpetual reimagining of identity, on the scale of one life or of human history, is deeply related to music: The quest is lyrical, whether the subject is as specific as "the emanation of a dead star still alive" or as personal as the "pinhole iris of your mortal eye." "-- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
May 19, 2017
Contents
Instrument
Procession
Creole
Mixed chorus
The orphan quadrille
The foundling tokens
Culture
New Moon haftorah
Genesis
Saying of the old
Grief
In the coma
The city
The warming
Cunning and greed
Dream medicine
Improvisation on Yiddish
The robots
Horn
Takes and gives
Ceremony
Evolution of the host
Glory
Running with noodles
Genesis according to the sculptor George Segal
Light
Góngora: Life is brief
Radioman
The saws.
Citation

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