Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Tide and Continuities: Last and First Poems, 1995-1938

Rate this book
Peter Viereck’s career in poetry is an ongoing experiment in the symbiosis of poetry and history. In Tide and Continuities that experiment has yielded its finest results. Included are many new poems, never before published, and stunning revisions from work as recent as his 1987 epic, Archer in the The Applewood Cycles , and as early as his 1948 Pulitzer Prize-winning collection, Terror and Decorum . This collection is the revelation of a great American poet. The Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky calls Viereck “possibly the greatest rhymer of / the modern period.” This is Viereck’s most lyrical, most passionate book; hence Brodsky rhymes “lyric” with “Viereck.” Tide and Continuities marks Viereck’s complete evolution as a poet, and brilliantly describes the arc of more than a half century’s work.

340 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

5 people want to read

About the author

Peter Viereck

43 books17 followers
Peter Robert Edwin Viereck (August 5, 1916 – May 13, 2006), was an American poet and political thinker, as well as a professor of history at Mount Holyoke College for five decades.

Viereck was born in New York, the son of George Sylvester Viereck. He received his B.A. summa cum laude in history in 1937 from Harvard University. He then specialized in European history, receiving his M.A. in 1939 and his Ph.D. in 1942 in history, again from Harvard.

Viereck was prolific in his writing, publishing much since 1938. He was a respected poet, who published numerous poetry collections. In addition, a number of his poems were first published in Poetry Magazine. His collection of poetry, Terror and Decorum, won the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.

~~~

Author of Metapolitics (1941) and Archer in the marrow, (c1984)

Biog. resource center (Contemp. authors), Oct. 7, 2005: (Peter (Robert Edwin) Viereck; b. Aug. 5, 1916, New York, N.Y.; Harvard University, Ph. D., 1942; William R. Kenan Chair of History, Mount Holyoke College, 1979-)

Biog. resource center (Contemp. authors), May 17, 2006: (Peter (Robert Edwin) Viereck; b. Aug. 5, 1916, New York, N.Y.; Harvard University, Ph. D., 1942; William R. Kenan Chair of History, Mount Holyoke College, 1979-)

New York times WWW site, May 19, 2006: (Peter Viereck; Peter Robert Edwin Viereck; b. Aug. 5, 1916, Manhattan; d. Saturday [May 13, 2006], South Hadley, Mass., aged 89; noted historian, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, and founder of the mid-20th-century American conservative movement who later denounced what he saw as its late-20th-century excesses)

LC database, May 19, 2006 |b (hdg.: Viereck, Peter Robert Edwin, 1916- ; usage: Peter Viereck [predominant form], Peter Robert Edwin Viereck)

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
0 (0%)
4 stars
0 (0%)
3 stars
1 (50%)
2 stars
1 (50%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for J. Alfred.
1,827 reviews37 followers
July 8, 2022
Full of technical contrivances, densely learned and insistent about it, these poems are noisy, complicated, and close to meaningless. When they wander toward having some human meaning, it appears to be unpleasant and not worth the effort.
In a grouping of poems which are written from the standpoint of trees, one poem uses this as an epigraph:

"The core has its resins of which the resin knows nothing." -Pascal

This is a multilingual pun which does nothing for the poem to which it adheres to except to advertise that its author has some learning and verbal facility. It is also the best thing I came across between the boards of the volume.
Not strenuously recommended.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.