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How Beautiful the Beloved

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"[A] confident, mystical, expansive project."—Publishers Weekly

"[D]azzling and timeless . . . focus is so unwaveringly aimed toward the transcendent—not God, but the beloved—that we seem to slip into a less cluttered time."—The Virginia Quarterly Review, "Editor's Choice"

"Mary Oliver calls him '...a Walt Whitman without an inch of Whitman's bunting or oratory.' In these pages, he is more nearly a modern-day Rumi. This is not primarily a poetry of image, but of ideas, perfectly distilled. Orr brings together the monumental themes of love and loss in small, spare, and exquisite koan-like poems."—ForeWord

"...magnetic poems that open the world of lyrical verse to the larger questions of what is true and timeless."
—The Bloomsbury Review

Gregory Orr continues his acclaimed project on the "beloved" with a lyrical sequence about the joys and hungers of being fully engaged in life. Through concise, perfectly formed poems, he wakes us to the ecstatic possibilities of recognizing and risking love. Mary Oliver has called this project "gorgeous," and said that he "speaks of the events that have no larger or more important rival in our lives—of our love and our loving."

If to say it once
And once only, then still
To say: Yes.

And say it complete,
Say it as if the word
Filled the whole moment
With its absolute saying.

Later for "but,"
Later for "if."

Now
Only the single syllable
That is the beloved.
That is the world.

Gregory Orr is the author of ten books of poetry. He teaches at the University of Virginia and lives in Charlottesville.

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Joy, in all its radiance and risk, is the lifeblood of this ambitious, transcendent, lyrical suite

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 20, 2009
      In his sequel to Concerning the Book That Is the Body of the Beloved
      (2005), Orr offers more short (many don't break 10 lines), earnest poems that take as their central metaphor “the beloved,†Orr's word for a conflation of a loved human being, the idea of a kind of higher power beyond the self at which love and energy are directed, and the poetry itself, which bears all this praise in what Orr calls “the Book.†The best of these poems are compact missives addressing in the most direct language possible many of humanity's most dire needs and fears: “That single line: a rope/ The poem tossed out/ Into the dark./... / You're holding one end; The beloved, the other.// Rescue is imminent.// Too soon to say whose.†Elsewhere, the language is so direct that it's more like journaling than poetry. Most perplexing and interesting, however, are many poems in which the language would
      fall flat, except that Orr's line breaks add meaning and almost Rilkian power; imagine this going down the page: “...death is real, and all/ That is/ Flows toward its brink.// No wonder we need/ Hope and courage—// What the book brings.â€

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