Most of us, at one time or another, have experienced wanderlust. For many, the desire to explore is almost irresistible. Now for devotees of poetry, and for those who long for the open road, this highly affordable collection contains a rich selection of poems about travel and adventure. You’ll find more than 90 poems by 50 American and British masters (mainly from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries), including Whitman, Byron, Millay, Sandburg, Service, Bliss Carman, Robert Louis Stevenson, John Masefield, Langston Hughes, Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, Shelley, Tennyson, Yeats, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Claude McKay, Christina Rossetti, and other fellow travelers. Their poems celebrate the real and metaphorical journeys each of us takes in the course of our lives towards love, discovery, loss, leaving the nest, and coming home. Whatever your mode of transportation, and wherever you are going, take this literary traveling companion with you for hours of reading enjoyment and insight into the road that lies ahead.
Travel is my main hobby, along with my husband. Every year, we plan for one major domestic and one major international vacation, plus several weekend trips within easy driving distance. Needless to say, Covid has not been kind to our lifestyle.
Just when my wanderlust threatened to overwhelm me, this skinny little book of poetry came to my rescue! Poems about the open road, ships on the sea, trains, flight, even spiritual journeys fill the 61 pages. I was surprised to discover a poem about train rides by one of my personal favorites, Ogden Nash! I had never read that one before.
I spent longer than I expected to, savoring these verses. Poetry shouldn’t be rushed.
Really excellent selection, pulling together a lot of great poetry in a very good mix of things I already liked and things I hadn't previously encountered. I thoroughly enjoyed it. I wish there were more books like this.
I have had a copy of this book for years and love to re-read it every once in a while. The yellowed pages are lined with notes and dog-eared to favorite pages.
An excellent little collection of poetry related to travel and adventure from a wide range of authors. It’s a great way to discover some poetry and get motivated to go outside and enjoy the wonders of the wide world.
Owen’s Review: 5/5 milk bottles. It’s a good thing mom and dad already take me on adventures. I’d demand more after reading these poems otherwise. I particularly enjoyed the sing-songy ones.
I read this book because of a quote read during the documentary Hello, Bookstore. The bookstore owner read a poem by Edna St Vincent Millay which led me to seek out this book. Glad I read it. Really enjoyed a few of the poems.
A lovely, inexpensive collection of poems, perfect to inspire the entire gamut of emotions traveling engenders, from wanderlust to homesickness. If you want to travel or to go home, to go by air or by sea or by foot, you will have no trouble finding the right poem for you, with a variety of poets and styles to choose from.
Although it's also a strength, I found the selection of poems could have been trimmed, or at least better arranged. Too often, the next poem would be a little too similar and thus hurt by comparison. Nevertheless, this is a must-have poetry collection for anyone longing to hit the road, with enough to please anybody.
Some of my personal favorites:
"what is" by E. E. Cummings -- its syntax is as jarring as a ship at sea. And that's what makes it marvelous. You must read this one aloud.
"Death of an Old Seaman" by Langston Hughes -- A quiet, touching ode to a human but seabound soul.
"Recuerdo" by Edna St. Vincent Millay -- a backpacking couple's anthem. Guaranteed to inspire envy.
I will definitely be revisiting this collection from time to time.
An enjoyable collection of mostly mid-19th to mid-20th century poetry, including poems by, among many others, Walt Whitman, Langston Hughes, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Robert Frost, and Paul Laurence Dunbar. I particularly liked this Imagist poem by Carl Sandburg:
Night from a railroad car window Is a great, dark, soft thing Broken across with slashes of light.
Also if you're the type to appreciate found poetry, take a few minutes to scan the index of authors, titles, and first lines. In a small collection like this in which the poems are all working on similar topics and themes, the titles and first lines can sometimes come together in rather pleasing ways. For example:
Out in the sky the great dark clouds are massing; Out where the handclasp's a little stronger, Out Where the West Begins
and
The Railroad track is miles away, The sea is flecked with bars of grey, The tide rises, the tide falls The world's an inn, and I her guest
Reading this volume of poetry by many great poets filled with a great sense of adventure, and reminded me that everyday itself is quite an adventure. This book will be one that I return to again and again. My two particular favorites were There Is No Frigate Like A Book by Emily Dickinson, and The Lake Isle of Innisfree by William Butler Yeats
Perhaps this should have a higher rating. Much of the anthology is wonderful reading. The best part of reading an anthology is finding new authors or poets to check out and this book is no exception. It is loosely organized from leaving on a journey, going by ship and rail and air, then returning home. Except the coming home became more of a reflection on dying than ending a trip. Poets included in this slim volume range from Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost and John Masefield to Rudyard Kipling, Carl Sandburg, Robert Service and Ogdan Nash. Some were familiar as Masefield's "I must go down to the sea again" and "Whose woods are these, I think I know" to others never read before like "I've known rivers" and "I do not own an inch of land, But all I see is mine." The poems are widely varied, mostly very enjoyable. Any reader should find at least a few to suit them.
A great short anthology to fill you with longing for an adventure. It included a mixture of well-known classics, along with some lesser-known poems I'd never read, but thoroughly enjoyed.
Some new discoveries worth mentioning: - Columbus by Joaquin Miller - High Flight by John Gillespie Magee, Jr. - Exultation is in the Going by Emily Dickinson - The Winds of Fate by Ella Wheeler Wilcox - America for Me by Henry Van Dyke - Escapist—Never by Robert Frost - Exiled by Edna St. Vincent Millay - Taking the Night Train by John James Piat
This was a beautiful collection of poetry. It had some quite famous poems that I had read before in English classes, but also lots of new ones for me. I love travel, so this was a great find for me (I found it in a little library book box). Just a few of my favorites were "Highway" by Gene Zeiger, "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" by Yeats, "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening" by Frost, "High Flight" by John Gillespie Magee, and finally "Heart o' the North" by Robert Service. The Zeiger poem in particular completely blew me away with just how stunning it was. I never would have found that poem otherwise.
I have been a fan of Dover Publications since I was a teenager. Dover publishes works of lasting value that have outlived their copyright. This little volume of poetry was published in 1999 and sold for one dollar. From Robert Service’s “Heart of the North” to Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “Ozymandias,” the editors have gathered some of the most enduring poetic works of movement and discovery, from “Devil-may-care narrations of peril and intrigue to more pensive meditations on soulful wandering.” Read more at bookmanread.blogspot.com .
A decent collection of poetry based on the theme of travel on the open road, by sea, by rail, or other method. It also includes poems on coming back home. I rather enjoyed about 50 out of the 80 poems. I also learned of a few new posts to try out. I use this book as a quick poetry break to whatever longer book I was reading at the time. In this case, that would have been George Elliot's Middlenarch.
As others have pointed out, this is a collection of poems by various authors, not just Walt Whitman.
This is a really great, fun (albeit short) collection of poems all about travel! This is exactly what I was looking for. It's fun, inspiring, and I found some new poets to check out, I definitely recommend going through this little book.
Most of these poems come from a time when the public at large read poetry. If you don't mind rhyming verse, you might enjoy this collection. As for myself...well, it's not my favorite anthology. Nonetheless, I'm going to give it five stars--as a poet, I don't feel worthy to criticize the masters. After all, I'm walking a path they helped to create.
Mostly familiar names. Good stuff, but nothing ground breaking. Nice inclusion in my collection. Nice Mother's Day gift in anticipation for a family trip this summer. Beyond that, there are better ways to experience these poems, I think.
While there are quite a few classics, this volume could have used the fresh air of new poets. Some of the poems I loved already, Robert Frost's, and I found some new loves.
Really nice assortment of poetry (Romantic, Victorian, and Modern), lots of Longfellow, Lord Byron, Whitman, Hughes, Service, Dickinson, etc...but I didn't like that there was a fair amount of excerpting (like with Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and Little Gidding).
This is the third of four Dover poetry anthologies that I am reviewing. As is the case with the others, this is an inexpensive, easily portable volume.
There are 99 poems by 62 different poets. Includes 'A' Listers such as Browning, Cummings, Dickinson, Eliot, Frost, Longfellow, Nash, Poe, Sandburg, Whitman, and Yeats. Though the narrow focus of the subject matter also allows for inclusion of lesser known poets who might not be recognized otherwise. The pieces are organized into three sections: Songs For the Open Road; Sea, Rail, and Sky; and Home, Rest, and Final Voyages. There is an index of poets' names, titles, and first lines.
I have selected ten poems that deserve special mention:
"The Sacred" - Stephen Dunn "Get Up, Blues" - James Emanuel "The Road Not Taken" - Robert Frost "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening" - Frost "The New Colossus" - Emma Lazarus "Sea-Fever" - John Masefield "Exiled" - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Riding On A Railroad Train" - Ogden Nash "Night Journey" - Theodore Roethke "America For Me" - Henry Van Dyke
Here I discovered Robert Service - a phenomenal poet in my respect. His poems sit beside Walt Whitman's, e.e. cummings, Robert Frost, and even the Bible in this collection. It's a nice menagerie of poems and poets, though very small - about seventy pages total. My only issue with the text is the range of works does not solely focus on the "open road" - there's poems of sea, air, and rail travel too. This would be more aptly titled "Wanderlust: Poems for the Nomad" or something...