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Tide Country
1982 poetry collection by Vivian Smith From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Tide Country is a collection of poems by Australian poet Vivian Smith, published by Angus and Robertson in 1982.[1]
The collection contains 84 poems taken from a variety of publications such as The Australian newspaper, The Bulletin, Meanjin, Overland, Southerly, and others.[2]
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Contents
- "Bedlam Hills"
- "Bird Sanctuary"
- "The Shadow"
- "In Summer Rain"
- "Summer Band Concert"
- "Fishermen, Winter"
- "Thylacine"
- "Deserted Bandstand, Kingston Beach"
- "Alceste's Resolution (Alceste (to Gwen Harwood))"
- "Old Men are Facts : The Ship's Graveyard, Risdon, Tasmania"
- "Despite the Room"
- "Water-Beetles"
- "Winter"
- "For My Daughter"
- "Myth"
- "The Last Summer"
- "Fishermen, Drowned Beyond the West Coast"
- "Late Autumn Dove"
- "The Other Meaning"
- "Advice (One Season)"
- "Wrong Turning"
- "Philoctetes (Philoctetes (In a Private Hotel))"
- "Family Album"
- "Quiet Evening"
- "Deathbed Sketch (for an Unnamed Portrait, Signed)"
- "Bus Ride"
- "An Effect of Light"
- "Dialogue with a Contemporary"
- "There is No Sleight of Hand"
- "Early Arrival: Sydney"
- "Summer Sketches: Sydney"
- "Return to Hobart"
- "For a New Year"
- "Late April: Hobart"
- "Warmth in July : Hobart"
- "Crows in Winter"
- "At an Exhibition of Historical Paintings, Hobart"
- "Reflections"
- "Balmoral Summer '66"
- "View from the Domain, Hobart"
- "A Room in Mosman"
- "Postcard from the Subtropics (Postcard from the Sub-Tropics)"
- "Summer Notes"
- "Lines for Rosamond McCulloch"
- "For Edith Holmes: Tasmanian Painter"
- "A Few Words for Maxi"
- "For Nan Chauncy : 1900-1970"
- "Coins and Bricks"
- "Onion in a Jar"
- "Three Landscapes : Slope with Boulders"
- "The Man Fern Near the Bus Stop"
- "Back in Hobart"
- "Il Convento, Batignano (for Robert Brain)"
- "Twenty Years of Sydney"
- "The Traveller Returns"
- "My Morning Dip"
- "The Edge of Winter"
- "Still Life"
- "Three Landscapes : The Restorers"
- "Revisiting"
- "The Tower : Muzot"
- "Late May : Sydney"
- "Looking Back"
- "Dung Beetles"
- "Tasmania"
- "Autumn Reading"
- "Convolvulus"
- "At the Parrot House, Taronga Park"
- "From Korea"
- "Delie, Obiect de Plvs Havlte Vertu (1544) (after Maurice Sceve)"
- "Variations on Garnier's Perpetuum Mobile"
- "Summer Feeling (after Britting)"
- "Under the Pine (after Peter Huchel)"
- "House for Sale (after Andre Frenaud)"
- "Corona (Poems After Paul Celan : Corona)"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : Flower"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : In Praise of Distance"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : Menhir"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : With Changing Key"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : Ich Bin Allein"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : The Whitest Dove of All"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : Sleep Then"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : Sleep and Food"
- "Poems After Paul Celan : I Heard it Said"
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Critical reception
Writing in The Age reviewer Kerryn Goldsworthy found in a lot of the poems Smith stuck to a certain forms which "sometimes lets him down, either through ostentatious overcarefulness at the expense of fluency, or through the tendency to cliche".[3]
In Australian Book Review Barbara Giles found that Smith writes "elegant, lyrical verse, carefully wrought and varied in content, in masterly fashion."[4]
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Notes
- Dedication: For Sybille, Vanessa, Gabrielle and Nicholas
Awards
- 1982 Grace Leven Prize for Poetry, winner[5]
- 1983 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, winner[6]
See also
References
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