Exilewith its sense of suspended or impending motion, of change, loss, acceptancegives James J. McAuley’s poems their need to be, their means of surviving the exigencies of the displaced spirit. Ancestors on both sides of his family were bards in Celtic Ireland. Although a naturalized United States citizen, McAuley has maintained his connections with his native land: the Irish times listed him among one hundred “significant Irish writers.” Although the poet writes of the familial and the domestic, he is writing at the same time of journeys out and back, of losses and recoveries. McAuley is as much at ease with the solemnity of elegy as with the invective of political satire or the sensual metaphysics of the love-poem.
Exilewith its sense of suspended or impending motion, of change, loss, acceptancegives James J. McAuley’s poems their need to be, their means of surviving the exigencies of the displaced spirit. Ancestors on both sides of his family were bards in Celtic Ireland. Although a naturalized United States citizen, McAuley has maintained his connections with his native land: the Irish times listed him among one hundred “significant Irish writers.” Although the poet writes of the familial and the domestic, he is writing at the same time of journeys out and back, of losses and recoveries. McAuley is as much at ease with the solemnity of elegy as with the invective of political satire or the sensual metaphysics of the love-poem.
Coming and Going: New and Selected Poems
161Coming and Going: New and Selected Poems
161Hardcover
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Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781557280725 |
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Publisher: | University of Arkansas Press |
Publication date: | 07/28/1989 |
Pages: | 161 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d) |