Jump to content

User:Perry Middlemiss/Sandbox7

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<---- Perry Middlemiss Sandbox Poetry collection---->

Collected Poems 1936-1967
AuthorDouglas Stewart
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry collection
PublisherAngus and Robertson
Publication date
1967
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages339 pp.
Awards1967 Grace Leven Prize for Poetry

Collected Poems 1936-1967 is a collection of poems by Australian writer Douglas Stewart, published by Angus and Robertson in 1967.[1]

The collection contains 235 poems, most of which were published in a number of the poet's earlier poetry collections.[2] The author notes in his "Acknowledgements" section of the book that some of the poems here had not previously been published in book form.

Contents

[edit]

THE FLOWERING PLACE (1962-1967)

  • "The Flowering Place"
  • "One Yard of Earth"
  • "B Flat"
  • "Audubon and the Pirate"
  • "The Peahen : A Meditation on Natural Selection"
  • "Two Englishmen"
  • "Reflections at a Parking Meter"
  • "Four-Letter Words"
  • "Farewell to Jindabyne"
  • "Flying Crooked"
  • "Wasp"
  • "Moreton Bays"
  • "Blowaway Grass"
  • "Boys Asleep on the Beach"
  • "Early"
  • "The Mice of Chinkapook"
  • "Ants"
  • "D'Albertis"
  • "Mungo Park"

From RUTHERFORD (1962)

  • "Professor Piccard"
  • "The Silkworms"
  • "Nesting Time"
  • "Sarcochilus Fitzgerald"
  • "Firetail Finches"
  • "Smoke Haze"
  • "Lyrebird"
  • "Firewheel Tree"
  • "Windy Night"
  • "The Pictures"
  • "The Dryad"
  • "Kookaburras"
  • "Goldfish"
  • "Waterlily"
  • "With a Wringer for Rosemary Dobson"
  • "The Lamps"
  • "At Circular Quay"
  • "Leopard-Skin"
  • "Fence"
  • "Horse"
  • "Terrigal"
  • "A Country Song"
  • "Three White Herons"
  • "The Dry Creek"
  • "The Man From Adaminaby"
  • "Yarrangobilly"
  • "Cunningham's Skink"
  • "The Gang-Gang (Bird and Man)"
  • "A Flock of Gang-Gangs (Gang-Gangs)"
  • "Familiars (A Sonnet for David Campbell)"
  • "The Blacktracker's Song"
  • "Rata"
  • "Easter Island"
  • "At the Entrance"
  • "Tanemahuta"
  • "The Garden of Ships : A Poem"
  • "Rutherford"

From THE BIRDSVILLE TRACK (1955)

  • "Wombat"
  • "Crow's Nest"
  • "The Finches"
  • "Christmas Bells"
  • "Foxes"
  • "Frogs"
  • "Flowering Bloodwoods"
  • "Crab and Cicada"
  • "Brindabella"
  • "Bird's-Eye"
  • "The Brown Snake"
  • "The Last of Snow"
  • "Spider-Gums"
  • "White Cockatoo"
  • "Murrumbidgee"
  • "The Night of the Moths"
  • "Everlasting"
  • "Cicada Song"
  • "Blackberry Pie"
  • "The Snow Gum"
  • "The Fierce Country"
  • "Marree"
  • "The Nameless"
  • "The Whipmaker"
  • "Afghan"
  • "The Track Begins"
  • "Grasshopper"
  • "World's End"
  • "The Brumby"
  • "The Humorists"
  • "Ruins"
  • "The Mules"
  • "Place Names"
  • "Sombrero"
  • "Outlaw"
  • "Lizard"
  • "Blazes Well"
  • "Mirage"
  • "Night Camp"
  • "Mungerannie Gap"
  • "The Seaweeds"
  • "Lutheran Mission"
  • "The Dogger"
  • "The Diamantina"
  • "The Branding Fire"
  • "The Rainmaker"
  • "Birdsville"

From SUN ORCHIDS (1952)

  • "Nodding Greenhood"
  • "The Gully"
  • "Native Inhabitant"
  • "A Robin"
  • "The Goldfish Pool"
  • "To Lie on the Grass"
  • "The Earth of the Ant"
  • "Mare and Foal"
  • "In the Rain"
  • "Frog Chorus"
  • "Oh No, Mister Thrush"
  • "The Moths"
  • "Country of Winter"
  • "Worsley Enchanted"
  • "Helmet Orchid"
  • "The Devil's Coachhorse"
  • "The Green Centipede"
  • "The Bees"
  • "Sun Orchids"
  • "The Magpie (Sunshower)"
  • "Flying Ants"
  • "The Mopokes"
  • "The Wild Violets"
  • "The Fireflies"
  • "Sheep Country"
  • "The Aboriginal Axe"
  • "The Sunflowers"
  • "The Fungus"
  • "Bearded Orchid"
  • "Kindred"
  • "Flower of Winter"
  • "Tongue Orchid"
  • "Mahony's Mountain"
  • "Terra Australis"

From WORSLEY ENCHANTED (From Sun Orchids, 1952)

  • "Worsley Enchanted"

GLENCOE (1947)

  • "Glencoe : I"
  • "Glencoe : II"
  • "Glencoe : III"
  • "Glencoe : IV"
  • "Glencoe : V"
  • "Glencoe : VI"
  • "Glencoe : VII"
  • "Glencoe : VIII"
  • "Glencoe : IX"
  • "Glencoe : X"
  • "Glencoe : XI"
  • "Glencoe : XII"
  • "Glencoe : XIII"
  • "Glencoe : XIV"
  • "Glencoe : XV"
  • "Glencoe : XVI"

Critical reception

[edit]

Writing in The Bulletin fellow poet Vivian Smith called Stewart "a very fine poet indeed, one of the best this country has produced", and noted that "there is a special satisfaction in seeing how fully Stewart has developed over the years."[3]

In the Sydney Morning Herald recommendations for the best books of 1967, a number or writers chose this collection. Bruce Beaver called the poems as "richly varied and inimitable as only he could make them"; Thelma Forshaw called Stewart a "poet who gives more pure pleasure than most"; H. G. Kippax noted that Stewart is "challenged only by Shaw Neilson as our finest lyric poet"; Leonie Kramer praised the "zest and directness" of the poetry; John Douglas Pringle called the poems "lyrical, humorous, precise and magical"; and Clement Semmler described the book as a "splendid collection...full of treasures."[4]

Awards

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Collected Poems 1936-1967 by Douglas Stewart". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  2. ^ "Austlit — Collected Poems 1936-1967 by Douglas Stewart". Austlit. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  3. ^ ""Douglas Stewart: a poet of evasive scepticism"". The Bulletin, 21 October 1967, pp89-90. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  4. ^ ""Books reviewers enjoyed most in 1967"". Sydney Morning Herald, 23 December 1967, p19. ProQuest 2525259379. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Austlit — Collected Poems 1936-1967 – Awards by Douglas Stewart". Austlit. Retrieved 22 November 2024.


Category:Australian poetry collections