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The Orphic Voice

The Orphic Voice

Poetry and Natural History

by Elizabeth Sewell, introduction by David Schenck

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Taking its bearings from the Greek myth of Orpheus, whose singing had the power to move the rocks and trees and to quiet the animals, Elizabeth Sewell’s The Orphic Voice transforms our understanding of the relationship between mind and nature. Myth, Sewell argues, is not mere fable but an ancient and vital form of reflection that unites poetry, philosophy, and natural science: Shakespeare with Francis Bacon and Giambattista Vico; Wordsworth and Rilke with Michael Polanyi. All these members of the Orphic company share a common perception that “discovery, in science and poetry, is a mythological situation in which the mind unites with a figure of its own devising as a means toward understanding the world.” Sewell’s visionary book, first published in 1960, presents brilliantly illuminating readings of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus, among other masterpieces, while deepening our understanding not only of poetry and the history of ideas but of the biological reach of the mind.

Additional Book Information

Series: NYRB Classics
ISBN: 9781681376011
Pages: 496
Publication Date:

Praise

Elizabeth Sewell’s The Orphic Voice remains a vital source book for both working poets and readers invested in poetry. . . . This is a book of inspiration, yet not of the self-help variety; less a handbook or practical guide than a hodgepodge of terrific quotations and spirited insight, The Orphic Voice virtually insists upon a reader who is willing to meander through its pages.
—Patrick James Dunagan, Rain Taxi

This is an inspired book, an argument which is poetry in action. It may very well be that Elizabeth Sewell is of the visionary company which her work describes. I regard The Orphic Voice as a book of tremendous originality and importance.
—George Steiner

Esoteric [and] engrossing . . . Sewell contends that poetry is our most inclusive form of thought, the best instrument yet devised for dealing with wholes, for unifying all the forms in nature, whether they pertain to inner or outer landscape.
—Stanley Kunitz

The Orphic Voice is important both in the literature of the history of ideas and as a kind of source-book for working poets (and readers of poetry).
—Denise Levertov

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