HomeInvisible Listeners: Lyric Intimacy in Herbert, Whitman, and Ashbery
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Invisible Listeners: Lyric Intimacy in Herbert, Whitman, and Ashbery

hardcoverSeptember 11, 2005
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ISBN-13: 9780691116181 ISBN-10: 0691116180
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
September 11, 2005
Weight
0.6 lbs
Dimensions
21.60×1.90×14.60 cm

About this book

Invisible Listeners: Lyric Intimacy in Herbert, Whitman, and Ashbery by Vendler, Helen. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780691116181.

When a poet addresses a living person—whether friend or enemy, lover or sister—we recognize the expression of intimacy. But what impels poets to leap across time and space to speak to invisible listeners, seeking an ideal intimacy—George Herbert with God, Walt Whitman with a reader in the future, John Ashbery with the Renaissance painter Francesco Parmigianino? In Invisible Listeners, Helen Vendler argues that such poets must invent the language that will enact, on the page, an intimacy they lack in life. Through brilliantly insightful and gracefully written readings of these three great poets over three different centuries, Vendler maps out their relationships with their chosen listeners. For his part, Herbert revises the usual "vertical" address to God in favor of a "horizontal" one-addressing God as a friend. Whitman hovers in a sometimes erotic, sometimes quasi-religious language in conceiving the democratic camerado, who will, following Whitmans example, find his true self. And yet the camerado will be replaced, in Whitmans verse, by the ultimate invisible listener, Death. Ashbery, seeking a fellow artist who believes that art always distorts what it represents, finds he must travel to the remote past. In tones both tender and skeptical he addresses Parmigianino, whose extraordinary self-portrait in a convex mirror furnishes the poet with both a theory and a precedent for his own inventions. By creating the forms and speech of ideal intimacy, these poets set forth the possibility of a more complete and satisfactory human interchange—an ethics of relation that is uncoerced, understanding, and free.