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Genevieve Taggard (стр. 2 из 2)

Emily Dickinson–makes the significant suggestion for us that it was less possible to

follow the bent of such a mind in his day than it was in 1850, or than it is today.

Science is lamented and deplored by contemporary romanticists. For the metaphysical poet,

Science is the freedom of the universe–and in the future our greatest poets may well be

poets of this mind. Some Moses striking a rock on the desert Mr. Eliot describes as the

wasteland and with his touch liberating a vast unused mentality; the excitement of

enormous sweeps, the dizziness of looking in all directions at the surrounding fact.

*"The poet is a valued member of the community, for he is known to be a poet; his

value will increase as he grows to recognize the deeper insight into nature with which

modern science provides him. The metaphysician is a poet, often a very great one, but

unfortunately he is not known to be a poet, because he strives to clothe his poetry in the

language of reason, and hence it follows that he is liable to be a dangerous member of the

community."—Karl Pearson: Grammar of Science, Part I, p. 17.

from Circumference: Varieties of Metaphysical Verse, 1456-1928. Ed. Genevieve

Taggard. New York: Covici Friede Publishers, 1929.