The Path to Fairview

by Julia Randall

Blurb

For more than forty years Julia Randall, unswayed by the whims of fashion, has been crafting poems of an intensity and originality equaled by few of her peers. In The Path to Fairview, Randall presents a distillation of her best work, almost two hundred poems altogether, ranging from three selections from her first book, The Solstice Tree (1952), to more than two dozen new poems. This volume offers the pleasure of watching a poetry unfold, from the elegance of the early poems, whose easy voice belies an impressive formal sophistication, to the newest poems, which embrace a more pliable, freer (though never loose) form. Much of Randall's poetry is Romantic (indeed, two poems are addressed to Wordsworth) in that it attempts to integrate nature and perception and to unite the two in an organically whole vision. And in many poems Randall extols the importance of place. In "Maryland, " for example, she writes: Then if place, / Too, is our ancestor (that is / The forever England concept), this low east, / Like love, rides in the gesture of my flesh. Humor, irony, celebration, and loss weave through these poems, captured in lines of lyrical beauty and often surprising directness. Randall's work offers the opportunity of discovery, expressed in the imagery of "The Writer Indulges a Hobby": We searched the wood again / for mushrooms, after the last rain. In a mile or so / found only a few. Then, coming back, / saw dozens sprung beside our very track, / like leaves, like nuts, like chips of shale, / pale as a sunpatch, dark / as a waterstain, and all before unseen. Intelligent and thoughtful, this long-awaited collection, this summing-up of an impressive career, will repay readers no matter howmany times they take the path through its pages.

Member Reviews Write your own review

Be the first person to review

Log in to comment