The Strange, Dark Life of Edwin Arlington Robinson - (Biography)

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  • Опубліковано 13 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 27

  • @jerrybecker1628
    @jerrybecker1628 Рік тому +3

    I learned of E.A. Robinson through the poem of Richard Cory--Its situational inscrutable ironic end will always be the greatest in poetic structure for me! No wonder that it won the Pulitzer prize and took America by storm!

  • @geeceesteiner62
    @geeceesteiner62 3 роки тому +16

    Beautifully told. Dramatically told. Well, well done. Thank you.

  • @Thomas_Stearns_Eliot
    @Thomas_Stearns_Eliot Рік тому +4

    Incredible content. Thank you for showing me Robinson

  • @alyswilliams9571
    @alyswilliams9571 3 роки тому +10

    What a fascinating talk about an extraordinary man. Maybe you could do a series of talks on American poets Mr. Gioia. Just a suggestion.

  • @allanrinaldipaone9850
    @allanrinaldipaone9850 2 роки тому +5

    It was exactly fifty years ago as young university freshman in Boston just across the river from you that I discovered Richard Cory and Miniver Cheevy and my life was changed forever, no more shame. And that was just to mention two, when words jump out and hit you in the face! Thank you for the "joy" this brought to me.

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy Місяць тому +1

    An outstanding story, well told. I’ve bought some of his poetry.

  • @nobodyatallvallejo3672
    @nobodyatallvallejo3672 Рік тому +2

    One of my favorite American poets. Glad I came across his work in college.

  • @tomgoff6867
    @tomgoff6867 3 роки тому +13

    Fine presentation. There is much in this video that I had not previously known about Robinson, including just how he was put in contact with Theodore Roosevelt, or exactly how jealous Frost was of Robinson. One wonders too if his brothers could indirectly have inspired that famous poem "Richard Cory." The ghostly fadeout at the end, with a late mazurka by Chopin, is most appropriate.

  • @bewareofpigeons
    @bewareofpigeons Рік тому +1

    A fascinating lecture on a poet who persisted in his belief in his talent, undaunted by the seemingly insuperable obstacles that life placed in his way.

  • @YourPoetryMom
    @YourPoetryMom 3 роки тому +9

    Fascinating -- both the film and the subject. I must read more of Mr. Robinson's work. Thanks again for these video deep-dives into the world of poetry...

  • @three69
    @three69 Рік тому +1

    Lovely and elegantly told.

  • @Jski94
    @Jski94 Рік тому +3

    Great video for a great poet. I’ve just recently discovered his beautiful work and was delighted to find this video in my recommendations! Thank you!

  • @rievans57
    @rievans57 2 роки тому +3

    This was excellent. A truly captivating life and presentation.

  • @nickandmikec
    @nickandmikec Рік тому +1

    Hi Dana: I love Edwin Arlington Robinson's poem "Blue Girls"...thanks for posting this. Such a fine lyrical poet. As usual, the presentation is excellent. A tragic story of this poet's life, and that of his family. Nick Campbell

  • @purpledanny1958
    @purpledanny1958 3 роки тому +3

    Thanks for the brilliant intro.

  • @PabluchoViision
    @PabluchoViision 2 роки тому +2

    If the great theme of poetry is Time, with all the loss it brings, and its quest to undo that loss through language, I know of no more heartbreaking lines than these of Robinson’s, which may have been written in remembrance of his mother: “The laugh that love could not forgive/ Is hushed, and answers to no calling.// . . . The breast where roses could not live/ Has done with rising and with falling.// The beauty, shattered by the laws/ That have creation in their keeping,/ No longer trembles at applause/ Or over children that are sleeping.// And we who delve in beauty’s lore/ Know all that we have known before/ Of what inexorable cause/ Makes Time so vicious in his reaping.” (From: “For a Dead Lady”).
    Beautiful, haunting presentation, Mr. Gioia. There’s comfort, a measure of it, in knowing that Robinson was able to see his work read and honored in his lifetime. I guess he was the man who died twice.

  • @519djw6
    @519djw6 3 роки тому +5

    Wow! As I wrote in my "Facebook" comment about the first two minutes of Gioia's presentation, I had only known about Robinson's work from "Richard Cory" and a couple of other short, easily understood anthology pieces. For me, this is the time to delve into his other work--and maybe give Edwin Arlington Robinson his due. (The only other thing I knew about Robinson was that Teddy Roosevelt had given him a cushy "job"--with the stipulation that he only show up at the Customs House and continue to work on his poems.)

  • @judhudon6235
    @judhudon6235 Рік тому +1

    My two favorite American poets are Edgar Allan Poe and Edwin Arlington Robinson. To understand why poetry is not nearly as popular now as it was in Poe's and later Robinson's era, one has only to understand that Poe and Robinson wrote for people, whereas today's poets write for other poets. Great poetry is a fusion of poetic devices, music, mythology, philosophy, and deep emotional insights. Poe and Robinson had those five disciplines down flat. Today's poets are woefully ignorant of all five.

  • @Jski94
    @Jski94 Рік тому +1

    Wow just seen that you also did the Wallace Stevens video I recently watched, seriously these videos are amazing time capsules for anybody interested in these great poets, you’re doing the world a great service!

    • @DanaGioiaPoet
      @DanaGioiaPoet  Рік тому

      Thank you. I spend a lot of time writing the scripts for these videos. I try to include as much as I can.

  • @Priyan1122..
    @Priyan1122.. 9 місяців тому +1

    WOW SUPER ..

  • @springinfialta106
    @springinfialta106 2 роки тому +2

    We owe a great debt to Robinson, even more than the Department of the Treasury has tallied up.

  • @MrJamesdevereblest
    @MrJamesdevereblest 3 роки тому +1

    🎼💎

  • @tomgoff6867
    @tomgoff6867 3 роки тому +3

    Long Robinson
    Within the decade of the nineteenth’s Nineties
    And the first two tens allotted the Twentieth,
    You’d flex your meeting eyelids with benign squeeze
    To greet this tall Maine fellow of short breath
    (Cigars) and be foretold this gangly man,
    Most nondescript, would write insightful verse
    Destined to resonate beyond the span
    Of all the Parnassus claque who will rehearse
    Their vaunts with most stentorian clamorings.
    His voice, you must accustom yourself to:
    Raised just within earshot of his one good ear,
    Half-lost against monotone the deaf ear sings
    Itself. Empathic subtleties reach the few
    Who, at throng’s edge, find honed wit, strain to hear.

  • @nononouh
    @nononouh 2 роки тому

    20