An episode from 4/30/21: Here is a collection of all of the recordings I've made of the poetry of Robinson Jeffers from November of 2020 until this month.\xa0Jeffers' collected poetry spans three huge volumes, and nearly every individual collection included a narrative poem alongside the shorter lyrics. While Jeffers seemed to have believed that his reputation would rest on these longer poems, none of them (at least for me) come near matching the power that he is able to achieve in his shorter poems. It is easy to define him by his "inhumanist" philosophy, or to pigeon-hole him as a merely "Californian" or "ecological" poet, but no labels can contain what Jeffers was able to do with language.
\nFind all of these poems in The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers, or the \u2060The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers\u2060.
\nTamar (1920-1923)
\nRoan Stallion (1924-1925)
\nThe Women at Point Sur (1925-1926)
\nCawdor (1926-1928)
\nDear Judas (1928-1929)
\nThurso's Landing (1930-1931)
\nGive Your Heart to the Hawks (1931-1933)
\nSuch Counsels You Gave to Me (1935-1938)
\nThe Double Axe (1942-1947)
\nHungerfield (1948-1953)
\nLast Poems (1953-1962)
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\nAny comments, or suggestions for readings I should make in later episodes, can be emailed to\xa0humanvoiceswakeus1@gmail.com.
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