
For generations, poets have turned to the Bible for insight and inspiration. What did so many creative minds find in scripture? Is the Bible still a vital source of poetic inspirations?Chapters Into Verse is the first comprehensive collection ever made of poems written in English inspired by the Bible. A groundbreaking anthology, it introduces readers to a distinct heritage of English poetry: the scriptural tradition. Though frequently ignored and sometimes suppressed, this tradition rivals the classical and is every bit as venerable.Drawing a unique map of the history of English poetry, the two volumes of Chapters Into Verse survey and define the literary legacy of the Scriptures from the fourteenth century to the present. Each volume is arranged in scriptural order, and each poem is preceded by the biblical passage that inspired it. Thus readers can conveniently witness the various ways sacred text has sparked the imagination of poets throughout the ages.In Volume I, which covers Genesis to Malachi, almost every book of the Old Testament is represented. The collection features verses both famous and unfamiliar, from Milton's Paradise Lost and Lord Byron's Hebrew Melodies to Christopher Smart's hymns and Mary Herbert's psalms. The editors have included poems by virtually all the prominent religious poets--among them, John Donne, George Herbert, Henry Vaughan, Edward Taylor, and Gerard Manley Hopkins. Included, too, are devotional and visionary works from a wide range of vintage poets--Robert Burns, William Blake, Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Christina Rossetti, Alfred Tennyson, and Robert Browning.Proving that the Bible is just as powerful a source of inspiration today as it was in the past, the collection assembles a mixed congregation of modern and contemporary poets, such as Marianne Moore, Delmore Schwartz, Dylan Thomas, Robert Frost, William Carlos Williams, Countee Cullen, e.e. cummings, William Butler Yeats, Robert Lowell, Hugh McDiarmid, Laura (Riding) Ja
This two-volume anthology investigates the enduring influence of biblical scripture on the development and thematic content of English-language poetry from the fourteenth century to the modern era. Editors Laurence Wieder and Robert Allen Skotheim curate a vast collection of verse to argue that the scriptural tradition constitutes a literary heritage as significant and venerable as the classical tradition. By pairing specific biblical passages with the poems they inspired, the editors provide a structured framework for analyzing how sacred texts have continuously shaped the creative imagination across centuries.
What You Will Find
Scholars and critics recognize this collection as a foundational reference for understanding the intersection of theology and English literature. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the utility of the thematic arrangement for comparative literary study.
Page Count:
944
Publication Date:
1993-05-06
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195084934
ISBN-13:
9780195084931
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