Honey And Salt
Description
In these seventy-seven poems, Carl Sandburg eloquently celebrates the themes that enraged him as a poet for more than half a century--life, love, and death. Strongly lyrical, embracing life with warmth and affection, these luminous, intensely honest poems testify to man's courage, frailty, and tenderness and to the enduring wonders of nature.
They ask questions whose answers lie locked in the human heart and reveal once again why, although he won international eminence as a biographer, historian, novelist, and journalist, Carl Sandburg is, first and foremost, America's favorite poet.
This collection features such poems as:
- "Wingtip"
- "Love Is a Deep and a Dark and a Lonely"
- "Almanac"
- "Biography"
- "Fog"
- "Arithmetic"
"A magnificent tribute to the rich and enduring vitality of a poetic genius whose creative power has in no way lessened with the passing years. Those qualities of 'steel and velvet,' or rock-hardness and drifting-fog-softness, which this poet once attributed to Abraham Lincoln, are so perfectly blended in these poems that the reader is captivated by their alternate strength and tenderness, their pure lyricism and granite wisdom, their measure of honey and salt." -Chicago Tribune
|"A magnificent tribute to the rich and enduring vitality of a poetic genius whose creative power has in no way lessened with the passing years. Those qualities of 'steel and velvet,' or rock-hardness and drifting-fog-softness, which this poet once attributed to Abraham Lincoln, are so perfectly blended in these poems that the reader is captivated by their alternate strength and tenderness, their pure lyricism and granite wisdom, their measure of honey and salt." - Chicago Tribune
"Carl Sandburg's poetic voice is as vibrant as ever...reflecting a warm, youthful appreciation of life, a sharp lively wit and a tender approach to the human condition." - Philadelphia Inquirer
"There are long poems and four-liners, some sad, a few tart, almost all imagistic in technique, didactic in temper and affirmative in spirit. Generally, more private than public, the poems in one muted shape or another, still embody the American credo, a Lincolnesque humanism." - Kirkus Reviews
PUBLISHER:
HarperCollins
ISBN-10:
0156421658
ISBN-13:
9780156421652
BINDING:
Paperback / softback
PUBLICATION YEAR:
1967
NUMBER OF PAGES:
132
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
8.00(H) x 5.31(W)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General / adult
LANGUAGE:
English