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The Collected Poems

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This paperback edition contains the complete text of Roethke's seven published volumes in addition to sixteen previously uncollected poems. Included are his Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winners The Walking, Words for the Wind , and The Far Field .

These two hundred poems demonstrate the variety of Roethke's themes and styles, the comic and serious sides of his temperament, and his breakthroughs in the use of language. Together they document the development of an extraordinary creative source of American poetry.

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1961

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About the author

Theodore Roethke

74 books225 followers
American poet Theodore Roethke published short lyrical works in The Waking (1953) and other collections.

Rhythm and natural imagery characterized volumes of Theodore Huebner Roethke. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1954 for his book, The Waking. Roethke wrote of his poetry: The greenhouse "is my symbol for the whole of life, a womb, a heaven-on-earth." From childhood experiences of working in floral company of his family in Saginaw, Roethke drew inspiration. Beginning is 1941 with Open House, the distinguished poet and teacher published extensively; he received two National Book Awards among an array of honors. In 1959, Yale University awarded him the prestigious Bollingen Prize. Roethke taught at Michigan State College, (present-day Michigan State University) and at colleges in Pennsylvania and Vermont before joining the faculty of the University of Washington at Seattle in 1947.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 119 reviews
Profile Image for Mir.
4,955 reviews5,307 followers
April 28, 2011
There a several poems by Roethke that I quite like. Once in a while I think he is brilliant. But I've decided I can't read collections of his work. There is too much I don't care for, and too much repetition -- primarily repetition of a mood of self-absorption that gets old fast. Lust, guilt, poor you, whatever. Maybe if you tried actually talking to a woman instead of talking about their bodies and animality and desirability you'd have more luck. Even the poems about his wife (he married in middle age) don't really communicate much about her personality so much as how he was hot for her. Personally, I would not be pleased if my husband described me as a "creaturely creature" or "my lizard, my lively writher."

Roethke reminds me just a little too much of those over-introspective, socially retarded guys in grad school and how I had to explain to them why so-and-so was mad at them or such-and-such action would get them in trouble. And then they'd start thinking I was their friend (by which they really meant a recipient of their speech) and I'd have to say things like "Theodore, dude! You really can't write a poem like that to your underage student! Huh? It's okay because she's dead?! Um, I'm not sure that makes it better... I think her parents might be upset... It would really be better if you... What? No, I don't want to hear a poem about how you masturbated by the pond in the woods! No, really, don't tell me about it!"

But as I said, there are some great passages, and it is always interesting to how an individual's writing evolves over time.

This one reminds me of a slightly darker and dirtier Ogden Nash:

The stethoscope tells what everyone fears:
You're likely to go on living for years,
With a nurse-maid waddle and shop-girl simper,
And the style of your prose growing limper and limper.


My favorite of the ones I hadn't encountered previously is the first poem in the collection, "Open House":

My secrets cry aloud.
I have no need for tongue.
My heart keeps open house,
My doors are widely swung.
An epic of the eyes
My love, with no disguise.

My truths are all foreknown,
This anguish self-revealed.
I'm naked to the bone,
With nakedness my shield.
My self is what I wear:
I keep the spirit spare.
Profile Image for Peycho Kanev.
Author 25 books320 followers
October 4, 2011
Roethke's historical significance rests both on his established place in the American canon and on his influence over a subsequent generation of award-winning poets that includes Robert Bly, James Dickey, Carolyn Kizer, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, William Stafford, David Wagoner, and James Wright. The other difference between Roethke and other poets of his time is his technique. Roethke is never obscure; he always writes in fresh language, avoiding cliches, although his symbols are indeed personal and take time to understand. Roethke's craft is "strict and pure," such that even the staunchest defenders of Sylvia Plath have confessed that Roethke's writing is more disciplined. One is the unity of his work and vision -- this Collected Poems traces a single spiritual journey beginning with his childhood memories of the greenhouse, and ending somewhere among "the windy cliffs of forever", last visions tragically cut short by his early death. Roethke was a keen observer of the links between the physical world and the metaphysical, and poems such as "Meditation at Oyster River" show a profound understanding of Man's place in Nature even in the mundane-ness of the life of the individual. All in all, Roethke was one of the great twentieth century American poets, and these poems bear this out.
Like Keats said "he ne're is crowned with immortality
Who fears to follow where any voices lead."
Profile Image for Steven Godin.
2,768 reviews3,268 followers
January 11, 2020
Contents

OPEN HOUSE - 1941
THE LOST SON AND OTHER POEMS - 1948
From PRAISE TO THE END! - 1951
From WORDS FOR THE WIND - 1958
From I AM! SAYS THE LAMB - 1961
THE FAR FIELD - 1964
PREVIOUSLY UNCOLLECTED POEMS

Favourite poems -

To my Sister
Slow Season
For an Amorous Lady
The Gentle
Double Feature
Bring the day!
I knew a Woman
The Sensualists
Love's progress
The Longing
Her Words
Wish for a Young Wife
A Rouse for Stevens
Profile Image for Stephanie ~~.
299 reviews115 followers
February 16, 2024
Twenty-five years ago my favorite professor gifted me a copy of this collection of Roethke's poetry. I lent it to a good friend, and when she passed away, it was beside her bed. Her mother kept it as a token from me.

A few months ago I was walking and the poem, "Elegy For Jane" (which is my favorite of these poems) popped into my mind. Line after line, it came back to me. Oddly powerful, Roethke's writing is for any reader. The moment I returned home from my walk, I ordered myself another copy of Theodore Roethke's "The Collected Poems."

If you don't usually read poetry, I invite you to give this a try. Perhaps you've recently become interested in current poets, but haven't heard of Roethke? This book is the perfect collection for anyone. Truly. Below is a small excerpt from my favorite, "Elegy For Jane." (Written by Roethke about a student of his who passed away as the result of being thrown by a horse).

--------------------------------------------------------------------

"If only I could nudge you from this sleep,
My maimed darling, my skittery pigeon.
Over this damp grave I speak the words of my love:
I, with no rights in this matter,
Neither father nor lover."

© Theodore Roethke

⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
Profile Image for Jimmy.
Author 6 books273 followers
January 19, 2018
Book #1: Open House (1941)

In "Prognosis" Roethke uses these lines to show the impact of parents:

Though the devouring mother cry, "Escape me? Never---"
And the honeymoon be spoiled by a father's ghost,

Again in "The Premonition" he speaks of his father:

But when he stood up, that face
Was lost in a maze of water.

And here is his famous poem about a bat:

The Bat

By day the bat is cousin to the mouse.
He likes the attic of an aging house.

His fingers make a hat about his head.
His pulse beat is so slow we think him dead.

He loops in crazy figures half the night
Among the trees that face the corner light.

But when he brushes up against a screen,
We are afraid of what our eyes have seen:

For something is amiss or out of place
When mice with wings can wear a human face.

And finish off his first book with this one called "Night Journey":

Now as the train bears west,
Its rhythm rocks the earth,
And from my Pullman berth
I stare into the night
While others take their rest.
Bridges of iron lace,
A suddenness of trees,
A lap of mountain mist
All cross my line of sight,
Then a bleak wasted place,
And a lake below my knees.
Full on my neck I feel
The straining at a curve;
My muscles move with steel,
I wake in every nerve.
I watch a beacon swing
From dark to blazing bright;
We thunder through ravines
And gullies washed with light.
Beyond the mountain pass
Mist deepens on the pane;
We rush into a rain
That rattles double glass.
Wheels shake the roadbed stone,
The pistons jerk and shove,
I stay up half the night
To see the land I love.

Book #2: The Lost Son and Other Poems (1948)

Roethke has several memorable poems in Part I about helping his father in with gardening.

Then in Part II one of his greatest poems:

My Papa’s Waltz

The whiskey on your breath
Could make a small boy dizzy;
But I hung on like death:
Such waltzing was not easy.

We romped until the pans
Slid from the kitchen shelf;
My mother’s countenance
Could not unfrown itself.

The hand that held my wrist
Was battered on one knuckle;
At every step you missed
My right ear scraped a buckle.

You beat time on my head
With a palm caked hard by dirt,
Then waltzed me off to bed
Still clinging to your shirt.

One of my favorite opening lines of his is in "Dolor":

I have known the inexorable sadness of pencils.

Book #2: Praise to the End! (1951)

In this collection, Roethke wrote mostly what I would call today WTF poems.

Book #3: The Waking (1953)

It includes this great poem:

Elegy for Jane
(My student, thrown by a horse)

I remember the neckcurls, limp and damp as tendrils;
And her quick look, a sidelong pickerel smile;
And how, once startled into talk, the light syllables leaped for her,
And she balanced in the delight of her thought,
A wren, happy, tail into the wind,
Her song trembling the twigs and small branches.
The shade sang with her;
The leaves, their whispers turned to kissing,
And the mould sang in the bleached valleys under the rose.
Oh, when she was sad, she cast herself down into such a pure depth,
Even a father could not find her:
Scraping her cheek against straw,
Stirring the clearest water.
My sparrow, you are not here,
Waiting like a fern, making a spiney shadow.
The sides of wet stones cannot console me,
Nor the moss, wound with the last light.
If only I could nudge you from this sleep,
My maimed darling, my skittery pigeon.
Over this damp grave I speak the words of my love:
I, with no rights in this matter,
Neither father nor lover.

And, of course, probably his most famous and perhaps best poem:

The Waking

I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.

We think by feeling. What is there to know?
I hear my being dance from ear to ear.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Of those so close beside me, which are you?
God bless the Ground! I shall walk softly there,
And learn by going where I have to go.

Light takes the Tree; but who can tell us how?
The lowly worm climbs up a winding stair;
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.

Great Nature has another thing to do
To you and me; so take the lively air,
And, lovely, learn by going where to go.

This shaking keeps me steady. I should know.
What falls away is always. And is near.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I learn by going where I have to go.

Book #4: Words for the Wind (1958)

An unusual collection of children's poems and love poems and death poems. It does have this great love poem:

I Knew a Woman

I knew a woman, lovely in her bones,
When small birds sighed, she would sigh back at them;
Ah, when she moved, she moved more ways than one:
The shapes a bright container can contain!
Of her choice virtues only gods should speak,
Or English poets who grew up on Greek
(I’d have them sing in chorus, cheek to cheek).

How well her wishes went! She stroked my chin,
She taught me Turn, and Counter-turn, and Stand;
She taught me Touch, that undulant white skin;
I nibbled meekly from her proffered hand;
She was the sickle; I, poor I, the rake,
Coming behind her for her pretty sake
(But what prodigious mowing we did make).

Love likes a gander, and adores a goose:
Her full lips pursed, the errant note to seize;
She played it quick, she played it light and loose;
My eyes, they dazzled at her flowing knees;
Her several parts could keep a pure repose,
Or one hip quiver with a mobile nose
(She moved in circles, and those circles moved).

Let seed be grass, and grass turn into hay:
I’m martyr to a motion not my own;
What’s freedom for? To know eternity.
I swear she cast a shadow white as stone.
But who would count eternity in days?
These old bones live to learn her wanton ways:
(I measure time by how a body sways).

Book #5: I Am! Says the Lamb (1961)

Filled with fun nonsense poems like this one:

The Donkey


I had a Donkey, that was all right,
But he always wanted to fly my Kite;
Every time I let him, the String would bust.
Your Donkey is better behaved, I trust.

Book #6: The Far Field (1964)

Great animal poem:

The Meadow Mouse
1

In a shoe box stuffed in an old nylon stocking
Sleeps the baby mouse I found in the meadow,
Where he trembled and shook beneath a stick
Till I caught him up by the tail and brought him in,
Cradled in my hand,
A little quaker, the whole body of him trembling,
His absurd whiskers sticking out like a cartoon-mouse,
His feet like small leaves,
Little lizard-feet,
Whitish and spread wide when he tried to struggle away,
Wriggling like a minuscule puppy.

Now he's eaten his three kinds of cheese and drunk from his
bottle-cap watering-trough--
So much he just lies in one corner,
His tail curled under him, his belly big
As his head; his bat-like ears
Twitching, tilting toward the least sound.

Do I imagine he no longer trembles
When I come close to him?
He seems no longer to tremble.

2

But this morning the shoe-box house on the back porch is empty.
Where has he gone, my meadow mouse,
My thumb of a child that nuzzled in my palm? --
To run under the hawk's wing,
Under the eye of the great owl watching from the elm-tree,
To live by courtesy of the shrike, the snake, the tom-cat.

I think of the nestling fallen into the deep grass,
The turtle gasping in the dusty rubble of the highway,
The paralytic stunned in the tub, and the water rising,--
All things innocent, hapless, forsaken.

And another:

The Pike

The river turns,
Leaving a place for the eye to rest,
A furred, a rocky pool,
A bottom of water.

The crabs tilt and eat, leisurely,
And the small fish lie, without shadow, motionless,
Or drift lazily in and out of the weeds.
The bottom-stones shimmer back their irregular striations,
And the half-sunken branch bends away from the gazer's eye.

A scene for the self to abjure!-
And I lean, almost into the water,
My eye always beyond the surface reflection;
I lean, and love these manifold shapes,
Until, out from a dark cove,
From beyond the end of a mossy log,
With one sinuous ripple, then a rush,
A thrashing-up of the whole pool
The pike strikes.

Finally ends with Uncollected Poems. A collection of poems by a master.
Profile Image for Dan.
1,248 reviews52 followers
September 4, 2020
The highway ribboning out in a straight thrust to the North,
To the sand dunes and fish flies, hanging, thicker than moths,
Dying brightly under the street lights sunk in coarse concrete,
The towns with their high pitted road-crowns and deep gutters,
Their wooden stores of silvery pine and weather-beaten red courthouses
An old bridge below with a buckled iron railing, broken by some idiot plunger;
Underneath, the sluggish water running between weeds, broken wheels, tires, stones.
And all flows past—
The cemetery with two scrubby trees in the middle of the prairie,
The dead snakes and muskrats, the turtles gasping in the rubble,
The spikey purple bushes in the winding dry creek bed—
The floating hawks, the jackrabbits, the grazing cattle—
I am not moving but they are.

Excerpt from the poem Journey to the Interior by Theodore Roethke


The following scenario has played out for me countless times.

I read a famous work of an author (or poet) and most emphatically do not fall in love with it. But then I read another story by the same author and I’m blown away.

For example:

Larry McMurtry - I loved Terms of Endearment but Lonesome Dove not so much.

Ernest Hemingway - I loved the Killers but The Old Man and the Sea not so much

and countless others ...

Now I can add Theodore Roethke to this esteemed list.

I did not much care for the first 200 pages of poems in this book, but then came a short posthumous collection of poems called the Far Field. To use a cliche it spoke to me. Coming from Roethke’s travels around North America the poems are complete with imagery and observations of flora, fauna, and the natural world. My favorite poems were the following:

1. The Longing
2. The Meditation at Oyster River
3. Journey to the Interior
4. The Far Field
5. The Meadow Mouse

5 stars for the Far Field. Maybe 3.5 stars for the rest.
Profile Image for Mert.
Author 12 books78 followers
September 25, 2020
4/5 Stars (%79/100)

The fact that this amazing poet has only 7200 total ratings in Goodreads is really sad in my opinion. More people should be familiar with Roethke's poetry. He had lots of problems in his life and this really affected his writing style. The poems are very sad and make you feel hopeless. Also, the imagery is great in all of his poems. My favourites are: "The Waking," (of course) and "Wish for a Young Wife." (He was dying and he wished a healthy and long life for his young wife...)
Profile Image for Cary.
93 reviews5 followers
July 25, 2013
A wordless silence between words. An underrated poet in my mind, wouldn't doubt that he'd all but been forgotten had he been any less than brilliantly innovative. You want deep image? His stick runs deep. The river is wide. The way home for Roethke is back through the womb, back into blood. Additionally, if you've read My Papa's Waltz only, you have no idea, alright?
Profile Image for Heather.
27 reviews3 followers
June 27, 2010
One of my "desert island" books. I once had three copies because I kept loaning it out to friends who took too long to return it. The whole book is wonderful, but the poems from "The Lost Son" collection are my favorites.
37 reviews
July 16, 2020
The best part about Theodore Roethke's really good poetry (and actually most of it..) is that there are lines and instresses and endings that just defy any attempt by the mind to understand how he thought them up, how he felt them through; I can see no seams, no evidence whatsoever of how it was constructed. They hit they slide through so smooth that they instantly become as unnatural and as natural as a foot's movements with a shoe on.

But the most amazing part is that.. it's all such simple language, and so few words are used—without ever treading into being too vague or overly opaque—that I feel he could have written each poem about a leaf and got'damn pebble in stream nowhere on nowhere's eve and it would still be easily as remarkable, still be as perfectly quaint, dark, metaphysical, and tenderly light as it all is..


P.S. Roethke's like Whitman distilled, but like Dickinson unfurled just enough more. Read it. And just sit there for the sake of it. Or don't. Who cares, it's your life, no one can make you read. Do what you will.
834 reviews8 followers
September 8, 2022
A few of his love poems are quite good. But to be honest, this was not for me. There is a sense of futility or pointlessness to many of these poems. They do provide a little motivation. You want to get up and do something, anything, after reading dozen in a row.

There are birds and there are walls and they are everywhere in this collection.
My favorite poems were his later works, those in the chapter called “The Far Field“.

He writes in plain language but to be honest I don’t always understand what he’s talking about. Perhaps he lived a difficult life or a self obsessive life. Either way, this collection falls flat.
Author 6 books253 followers
March 10, 2017
James Dickey called him our best American poet, and he was the teacher of who I consider our best American poet (or one of them), Jack Gilbert.
It'd be hard to find fault with Roethke, then, though I struggled a bit with the first quarter of this collection (I'm not a fine of outright rhyming sonance). The rest of his stuff is great, subdued and often weird, not to the point of strangulated cacophony but a drifting sense of unease.
Profile Image for Bonnie.
190 reviews47 followers
May 25, 2014
I need to find out what poems I read in Premier Book of Major Poets: An Anthology that made me want this book so bad, because it was so tedious and disappointing. Maybe I'm not sophisticated enough to get it, but this guy rambles about leaves almost as much as Walt Whitman. Maybe that's not my genre. I think I need more structure. Like if you're going to talk about a river, finish the thought. If you're going to talk about love, don't cut yourself off mid-way to start talking about dirt on a rock. Frustrating. That being said, here are the poems I truly did enjoy:

- For An Amorous Lady
- Vernal Sentiment
- The Waking
- His Foreboding (Favorite line: "The loneliest thing I know, is my own mind at play.")
- The Shy Man
- The Geranium
- Lines Upon Leaving A Sanitarium
Profile Image for Kit.
1 review
March 21, 2012
My favorite poet, hands down. His way with words is stunning. Personal favorite poems include Reply to a Lady Editor, Elegy for Jane, My Papa’s Waltz, The Geranium and The Saginaw Song. I'm obsessed.
Profile Image for Nora Yoon.
101 reviews2 followers
July 22, 2022
Roethke isn't my favorite poet, but he does have a few that I really loved. Many of the poems in this collection are heavy with imagery, but reading too many in a row tends to exhaust one and feels similar to looking at a photoshoot of various natural scenes, all of them beautiful, but missing my favorite part of poetry: a particularly urgent emotion that screams to be written. Some of the poems also felt extremely idiosyncratic, and almost meaningless without having Roethke's lived experience, with variegated symbols that didn't quite align into a coherent theme.

But the best of his work was amazing. The first poem I ever ready by Roethke, "My Papa's Waltz" is a good representative of his best work. Similar in respects to Bogan's style, Roethke's love poems and musings on death were dense with complexity and made beautiful pirouettes around their subject. As usual, the ones I liked best were in form, but poems like "Journey to the Interior" moved me enough to make note of without following a specific structure.

Some references or similar themes:
Pure Fury-- Bogan's Medusa, Paradise Lost's Sin (The Fury)
The Far Field-- Frost's West-Running Brook (Especially the third and fourth stanzas)
The Tranced-- Entranced, which I wrote (obviously not a reference but the similarity between both title and theme shocked me).

Here's my poem and you can find his online if you want to compare.

"Entranced"

Let’s shed our shells tonight
And watch something truer glisten
In one white point of light
Transcending our veiled existence.

The air between our eyes
Is shuttled through by light and awed
By tenderness descried;
As medium through which farce thaws.

Brown and one step greener
Out of blur define the other—
Are less pure and yet cleaner
Than cut stones are— To this amber

Sunlight soon will return;
Our irises resume pretense
Once more, but once we’ve learned,
Always we’ll see th’other’s essence.

Anyway, Roethke overuses some symbols (he dances quite a lot) but also makes poetic connections between distant symbols that encapsulate the idea he has dancing in his mind (ha ha meta joke). All in all very much worth the read, but tedious at times. I think Bogan was more controlled in her style and there is an almost total lack of laziness in her work, with the only point I remember an absence of the semblance of her absolutely compelling intent being in "Poem in Prose", which works in its own sense. Roethke seemed to have more unfinished and unrefined pieces. The two were in a relationship, so it makes sense that there's a lot of overlap in what they write, but I definitely prefer Bogan. I have yet to read another poet so consistently powerful and emotive as her. I'm about to finish John Koethe's "Sally's Hair" next, and I have a lot to say about that one too.

This was a pretty long review, but I'm procrastinating so whatever.
Profile Image for Mattea Gernentz.
387 reviews43 followers
December 4, 2024
"All women loved dance in a dying light."

Oxfam gem! My writing mentor recommended this because my work reminded him of Roethke's "Memory" (in retrospect, what a grand compliment because that is one of his best pieces).

It is clear that Roethke believes in reworking the essence of the greats and paying homage, with references including Blake, WCW, Yeats, and Auden to name a few. (Also, plot twist, Roethke then influenced Sylvia Plath!) Many of his poems felt like dogged reiterations of the same idea—one can only read light, desire, leaf, death, and stone so many times. Yes, these are essentials of life, but, in a collection of this size, I expected more evolution. And then Roethke goes off and writes a string of nonsense poems that wouldn't be amiss in the oeuvre of Lewis Carroll. A bizarre choice, but fine.

He does emerge victorious on a line level (stupendous!), but his poems as a whole didn't often rivet me. I think Roethke would have been an entertaining professor though! I read he once climbed through his classroom's window and made faces at his students from outside. There is also a tender ode to a student who died young found in this collection.

You can tell that Roethke's Christian roots lingered, alongside his interest in mysticism.

"Make me, O Lord, at last, a simple thing / Time cannot overwhelm."
306 reviews2 followers
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July 31, 2020
Memory:

In the slow world of dream,
We breathe in unison.
The outside dies within,
And she knows all I am.

She turns, as if to go,
Half-bird, half-animal.
The wind dies on the hill.
Love’s all. Love’s all I know.

A doe drinks by a stream,
A doe and it’s fawn.
When I follow after them,
The grass changes to stone.
Profile Image for Descending Angel.
797 reviews32 followers
August 5, 2024
Some of it isn't all that great, there are a number of poems I didn't care for and then out of nowhere Roethke with hit you with something great, a mixed bag.
Profile Image for Nancy Lewis.
1,587 reviews56 followers
April 24, 2024
Most of these didn't make much sense, but there were a couple that I liked.
Profile Image for Nathaniel.
86 reviews2 followers
June 23, 2021
There are a small handful of Roethke's poems that have had a great impact on me, and which I'm grateful to possess physical copies of thanks to this book. But the majority of them are....blah. Sorry, Theodore.
Profile Image for The Master.
303 reviews7 followers
December 21, 2015
I suppose the time is right to admit that I had a secret, blazing love affair with Theodore Roethke when I was a student.

He showed me bird's tongue orchids, gave dreams of death, and taught me the inexorable sadness of pencils.

Theo's been dead since 1963, and my lit profs will be of too advanced an age to be much bothered by my admission.

After all these years, his voice jars me like the shattering of a clay flower pot.

Our worst moment was when I discovered the phonetic spelling of his surname. I'd been saying it wrong for years, but he had never corrected me. The discovery and the embarrassment of it made me burn like an old house in a far field.
60 reviews2 followers
April 2, 2016
I was familiar with only few of Theodore Roethke's poems, "The Waking," and "My Papa's Waltz." After reading his collected works, some two hundred poems, I am impressed with his body of work. I know that the late Jim Harrison, a great poet himself, thought much of Roethke. Maybe because they shared a love of the natural world.
It took me a long while to finish this collection because I wanted to savor these poems. I was also taken by the maturity in skill from reading his first collection, published in 1941, to the posthumously published poems in 1965. The long arc of his work.
Profile Image for Andy.
68 reviews23 followers
December 17, 2007
Some of it is mind-boggling--those swampy and phlegmy poems. Then there's crap like the much-anthologized "My Papa's Waltz." I'm glad to have rediscovered him--what's good here is unlike anything else, puts me in touch with something long-forgotten.
Profile Image for Gary McDowell.
Author 17 books24 followers
November 25, 2007
For me, it's all about the "North American Sequence" and the last book, The Far Field. Screw "My Papa's Waltz." ;)
Profile Image for Joshua Mark.
101 reviews4 followers
September 10, 2011
Like any great poet, Roethke gives words to experiences you forgot you ever had. Wonderful collection. Just the poem `What Can I Tell My Bones' can be mind altering.
Profile Image for kimyunalesca.
311 reviews35 followers
March 18, 2015
One of my new favorite poet.The Waking poem started all this for me I'm glad I found and bought a copy.I had loads of fun reading this I really enjoyed it!
350 reviews6 followers
July 13, 2019
Roethke is a subtle, brilliant, indispensable American poet.

Wish I'd discovered him sooner - great stuff!
Profile Image for violetderey.
134 reviews5 followers
November 21, 2021
I turn to reading and re-reading Roethke when I need reminding of the less analytical life. Beautiful poetry that always relaxes the limits of mundane experience.
Profile Image for chris.
841 reviews16 followers
April 27, 2024
Walk boldly my sister but do not deign to give
Remain secure from pain preserve thy hate thy heart.
-- "To My Sister"

Sometimes the blood is privileged to guess
The things the eye or hand cannot possess.
-- "The Signals"


I hate my epidermal dress,
The savage blood's obscenity,
The rags of my anatomy,
And willingly would I dispense
With false accouterments of sense,
To sleep immodestly, a most
Incarnadine and carnal ghost.
-- "Epidermal Macabre"

This urge, wrestle, resurrection of dry sticks,
Cut stems struggling to put down feet,
What saint strained so much,
Rose on such lopped limbs to a new life?

I can hear, underground, that sucking and sobbing,
In my veins, in my bones I feel it, --
The small waters seeping upward,
The tight grains parting at last.
When sprouts break out,
Slippery as fish,
I quail, lean to beginnings, sheath-wet.
-- "Cuttings (later)"


Kiss me, kiss me quick, mistress of lost wisdom,
Come out of a cloud, angel with several faces,
Bring me my hat, my umbrella and rubbers,
Enshroud me with Light! O Whirling! O Terrible Love!
-- "Last Words"

Such music in a skin!
A bird sings in the bush of your bones.
-- "Give Way, Ye Gates"


I'll seek my own meekness.
What grace I have is enough.
The lost have their own pace.
The stalks ask something else.
What the grave says,
The nest denies.

In their harsh thickets
The dead thrash.
They help.
-- "Unfold! Unfold!"

The body and the soul know how to play
In that dark world where gods have lost their way.
-- "Four for Sir John Davies"


Ghost cries out to ghost --
But who's afraid of that?
I fear those shadows most
That start from my own feet.
-- "The Surly One"

The moon draws back its waters from the shore.
By the lake's edge, I see a silver swan,
And she is what I would. In this light air,
Lost opposites bend down --
Sing of that nothing of which all is made,
Or listen into silence, like a god.

-- "The Swan"


I saw a young snake glide
Out of the mottled shade
And hang, limp on a stone:
A thin mouth, and a tongue
Stayed, in the still air.

It turned; it drew away;
Its shadow bent in half;
It quickened, and was gone.

I felt my slow blood warm.
I longed to be that thing,
The pure, sensuous form.

And I may be, some time.
-- "Snake"

Who would know the dawn
When there's a dazzling dark behind the sun?
-- "The Dying Man"

The edges of the summit still appall
When we brood on the dead or the beloved;
Nor can imagination do it all
In this last place of light: he dares to live
Who stops being a bird, yet beats his wings
Against the immense immeasurable emptiness of things.
-- "The Dying Man"


By swoops of bird, by leaps of fish, I live.
My shadow steadies in a shifting stream;
I live in the air; the long light is my home;
I dare caress the stones, the field my friend;
A light wind rises: I become the wind.
-- "Her Becoming"

How comprehensive that felicity!...
A body with the motion of a soul.
What dream's enough to breathe in? A dark dream.
The rose exceeds, the rose exceeds us all.
Who'd think the moon could pare itself so thin?
A great flame rises from the sunless sea;
The light cries out, and I am there to hear --
-- "The Longing"

I, who came back from the depths laughing too loudly,
Become another thing;
My eyes extend beyond the farthest bloom of the waves;
I lose and find myself in the long water;
I am gathered together once more;
I embrace the world.
-- "The Long Waters"


Is the body but a motion in a shoe?
-- "The Tranced"

What's madness but nobility of soul
At odds with circumstance?
-- "In a Dark Time"


A dark theme keeps me here,
Though summer blazes in the vireo's eye.
Who would be half possessed
By his own nakedness?
Waking's my care --
I'll make a broken music, or I'll die.
-- "In Evening Air"

I feel the autumn fail -- all that slow fire
Denied in me, who has denied desire.
-- "The Sequel"
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