Freedom of the Poet

John Berryman

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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Less than a year before his death in 1972, John Berryman signed a contract with his publisher for a book of prose, The Freedom of the Poet, for which he had made a selection from his published and unpublished writings.  In his draft of a prefatory note, he acknowledged the influence of Eliot, Blackmur, Pound, and Empson on his critical thought, pointing out that "my interest in critical theory has been slight," and concluding: "But I have also borne in mind throughout: remarks by Franz Kafka ('the story came out of me like a real birth, covered with slime and blood') and Joseph Conrad: 'All the great creations of literature have been symbolic, and in that way have gained in complexity, in power, in depth and in beauty.'" 
There are thirty-six pieces in all, including not only such justly famous writings on Elizabethan figures as "Shakespeare at Thirty" and "Thomas Nashe and The Unfortunate Traveller" but also "Shakespeare's Last Word" and "Marlowe's Damnations," published for the first time; essays on American writers like Dreiser, Crane, James, Lardner, Fitzgerald, and Bellow, and on poets like Hardy, Pound, Ransom, Eliot, Thomas, Lowell, and Williams; unpublished essays on Cervantes, Whitman's "Song of Myself," Conrad, and Anne Frank; "Thursday Out," an account of a trip to India, and stories, published and unpublished, including "Wash Far Away," "The Lovers," "All Their Colours Exiled," and "The Imaginary Jew."
The poet's "freedom" in Berryman's definition is not license but escape, release--even death.  The title piece--the second part of his essay on The Tempest--confirms this with his statement about Prospero: "This longing--for release, for freedom--...is neither disillusioned nor frightening.  It is radiant and desirous."
This final book which John Berryman himself prepared exhibits his erudition and scholarship, his critical insight and empathy, and a first-rate poet's powerful prose.

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The Freedom of the Poet
IMarlowe's DamnationsSHAKESPEARE AND BEN JONSON APART, ONLY OF CHRISTOPHER Marlowe among the playwrights of the first Elizabeth is enough known personally to make feasible an exploration of those connexions, now illuminating, now mysterious, between the artist's life and his work, which interest an increasing number of readers in this century, and the existence of which is denied only by very young persons or writers whose work perhaps really does bear no relation to their lives, tant pis pour eux.

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About the Author

John Berryman

John Berryman was born October 25th, 1914 and died on January 7th, 1972.  He is considered one of the great poets of his time.  Berryman won the Pulitzer Prize for his work 77 Dream Songs.  

John Berryman

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Freedom of the Poet
John Berryman

e-Book Agency

e-Book Agency
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
April 1976
e-Book Agency
ISBN: 9781466808003
ISBN10: 1466808004
250 pages
$6.99
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Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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