Foreword by Robert Creeley. — Hanover, London: Wesleyan University Press, 2000. — 178 p. — ISBN10: 0819564028; ISBN13: 978-0819564023.
By juxtaposing several translations of the same passage from Homer; an elegy from Ovid and lines from Herrick that read like an adaptation of Ovid; or a 15th-century poem about a rooster and a contemporary poem about white chickens, Louis Zukofsky has established a means for judging the values of poetic writing. A wonderful education for the fledgling poet, this handbook, first published in 1948, is the best elucidation of Zukofsky's "objectivist" premises for recognizing value in specific instances of poetry.
Foreword by Robert Creeley
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