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         Hecht Anthony:     more books (100)
  1. Collected Later Poems by Anthony Hecht, 2005-04-12
  2. Collected Earlier Poems by Anthony Hecht, 1992-02-25
  3. Selected Poems by Anthony Hecht, 2011-03-22
  4. Anthony Hecht In Conversation With Philip Hoy by Philip Hoy, Anthony Hecht, 2004-10-15
  5. Melodies Unheard: Essays on the Mysteries of Poetry (Johns Hopkins: Poetry and Fiction) by Anthony Hecht, 2005-08-30
  6. Bundle o'Tinder (Anthony Hecht Prize) (Anthony Hecht Prize 3) by Rose Kelleher, 2009-04-07
  7. Flight Among the Tombs: Poems by Anthony Hecht, 1998-01-12
  8. The Darkness and the Light: Poems by Anthony Hecht, 2001-06-12
  9. THE HARD HOURS-POEMS BY ANTHONY HECHT by Anthony Hecht, 1978
  10. Subtle Edens: An Anthology of Slipstream Fiction (Anthony Hecht Prize 3)
  11. On the Laws of the Poetic Art by Anthony Hecht, 1995-05-15
  12. Anthony Hecht (American University Studies, Series Xxiv, American Literature, Vol 7) by Norman German, 1989-06
  13. The Burdens of Formality: Essays on the Poetry of Anthony Hecht
  14. Forward Groove: Jazz and the Real World from Louis Armstrong to Gilad Atzmon (Anthony Hecht Prize 3) by Chris Searle, 2009-02-15

1. Anthony Hecht In Conversation With Philip Hoy
Anthony Hecht in conversation with Philip Hoy published October 2001 by Between The Lines, Interviews with Poets series. Hecht talks in unprecedented detail about his life and work. BTL's fourth volume - Anthony Hecht in conversation with Philip Hoy, with critical comments from Heather Clark of
http://www.interviews-with-poets.com/anthony-hecht
BTL's fourth volume - Anthony Hecht in conversation with Philip Hoy, with critical comments from Heather Clark of Thumbscrew , J.D. McClatchy, editor of The Yale Review and Mary-Jo Salter, poetry editor of The New Republic
Interviews with Poets
BTL talks to Anthony Hecht about his life and work
Anthony Hecht in conversation with Philip Hoy A 144 page book, featuring a 45,000 word interview, with a career sketch, a comprehensive bibliography, and a representative list of quotations from Hecht's critics and reviewers. Also included is Hecht's recent poem, An Orphic Calling Second edition, corrected and reset:
ISBN: 1-903291-10-0 (paperback)
Publication Date: October 2001 (first paperback edition, June 1999)
Publisher: Between The Lines
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On other pages
A note on Anthony Hecht
A note on Philip Hoy

Extracts from the conversation

To order online, please enable Javascript. What the critics said This new book from Between The Lines presents a kind of "imaginary conversation" developed from a batch of written questions mailed to the poet, and a flurry of replies, follow-up questions, and voluntary expansions - but at its heart is the plum reward of new angles from which to engage the poems ...
Anthony Hecht in Conversation has the frankness and summative qualities of the best memoirs, and extends well beyond the boundaries of the average magazine interview ...

2. Anthony Hecht
Notes on Hecht's work from the Modern American Poetry series.Category Arts Literature Authors H Hecht, Anthony......Anthony Hecht (1923). About Anthony Hecht On More Light! MoreLight! On A Hill Excerpts from an Online Interview with
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/hecht.htm
Anthony Hecht (1923-) About Anthony Hecht On "More Light! More Light!" On "A Hill" Excerpts from an Online Interview with Hecht ... External Links Prepared and Compiled by Edward Brunner and Cary Nelson Return to Modern American Poetry Home Return to Poets Index

3. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht. biographical notes. SAUL AND DAVID. from The Darkness The Light,copyright Anthony Hecht 2001 used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. WITNESS.
http://washingtonart.com/beltway/hecht.html
Anthony Hecht biographical notes SAUL AND DAVID It was a villainous spirit, snub-nosed, foul
Of breath, thick-taloned and malevolent,
That squatted within him wheresoever he went
And possessed the soul of Saul. There was no peace on pillow or on throne.
In dreams the toothless, dwarfed, and squinny-eyed
Started a joyful rumor that he had died
Unfriended and alone. The doctors were confounded. In his distress, he
Put aside arrogant ways and condescended
To seek among the flocks where they were tended
By the youngest son of Jesse, A shepherd boy, but goodly to look upon,
Unnoticed but God-favored, sturdy of limb As Michelangelo later imagined him, Comely even in his frown. Shall a mere shepherd provide the cure of kings? Heaven itself delights in ironies such As this, in which a boy's fingers would touch Pythagorean strings And by a modal artistry assemble The very Sons of Morning, the ranked and choired Heavens in sweet laudation of the Lord, And make Saul cease to tremble. from used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.

4. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht. More info Back to The DoubleDactylPage Back to The Stinky Poets' Collective
http://www.stinky.com/dactyl/hecht.html
Anthony Hecht
More info
Back to The Double-Dactyl Page
Back to The Stinky Poets' Collective

5. Borzoi Reader | Authors | Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht Beginnings . Anthony Hecht, 2/2001. Copyright© 2001by Anthony Hecht. All rights reserved. More Poets on Poetry.
http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/authors/hecht/poetsonpoetry.html
The Darkness and the Light
Flight Among the Tombs
Flight Among the Tombs
The Transparent Man


Anthony Hecht
"Beginnings"
My literary education began with nursery rhymes and Mother Goose, the fairly common way for those of my generation, as well as those going back to Victorian times. Hinx, minx, the old witch winks,
The fat begins to fry;
Nobody home but Jumping Joan,
Father, mother, and I. Stick, stock, stone dead, Blind man can't see; Every knave will have a slave, You or I must be he. What child would not be intrigued by such verse, filled as it is with admirable mystery: a witch, a curious person named "Jumping Joan," the mention of the unmentionable in the world of the real nursery, the dead, the blind, and slaves. Most of all, the frank inclusion of "me," as part of the drama. I was enchanted, and the more pleased to find that the grown-ups who read me these poems were as mystified as I by them. It would be many years before I would encounter: Scale of dragon, tooth of wolf

6. Borzoi Reader | Authors | Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht's first book of poems, A Summoning of Stones, appearedin 1954. It was followed by The Hard Hours, which received
http://www.randomhouse.com/knopf/authors/hecht/
The Darkness and the Light
Now available in paperback
Flight Among the Tombs
Flight Among the Tombs
The Transparent Man


Anthony Hecht's first book of poems, A Summoning of Stones, appeared in 1954. It was followed by The Hard Hours , which received the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1968. Millions of Strange Shadows was published in 1977, and The Venetian Vespers in 1979. The last three titles, together with the author's selection from the first book was published in 1990 as Collected Earlier Poems , together with a new book, The Transparent Man. He is the author also of a book of critical essays, Obbligati The Hidden Law , 1993, his study of the poetry of W.H. Auden; and On the Laws of the Poetic Art , 1995, the Andrew W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts, delivered at the National Gallery of Art in Washington in 1992. He has taught widely, most recently as University Professor in the Graduate School of Georgetown University, from which he has recently retired. He lives in Washington, D.C.
Photo: Dorothy Alexander
A turn, a glide, a quarter-turn and bow

7. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht, The Feast of Stephen. home Last updated 2001.11.7.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~richie/poetry/html/auth47.html
Anthony Hecht
The Feast of Stephen

[home]

Last updated: 2001.11.7.

8. Anthony Hecht
ANTHONY HECHT NOVEMBER 18, 1997 . Anthony Hecht, a native of New York City,is the winner of the Corrington Award for the 19971998 academic year.
http://corrington.centenary.edu/Hecht.htm
ANTHONY HECHT NOVEMBER 18, 1997 Anthony Hecht, a native of New York City, is the winner of the Corrington Award for the 1997-1998 academic year. He was born in 1923 in NYC, and got his college education at Bard College and Columbia University. He then served as a soldier in Europe during the turbulent years of World War II. It is the experiences that he gained there that led him to begin his life of poetry. His first book was published in 1954 - A Summoning of Stones . Fourteen years later, he won the Pulitzer Prize for his second book of poems, The Hard Hours . This powerful work can be found in the 1990 Collected Earlier Poems . Other previous books appearing in this anthology are: Millions of Strange Shadows (1977) and The Venetian Vespers (1979). His most recent work is Flight Among The Tombs , which appeared in 1996. What is the best way to describe Hecht's work? Dr. David Havird , a professor of English at Centenary College of Louisiana, says that Hecht "displays in his poetry something of the formal resourcefulness of Herbert; the elegance, erudition, wit, and savage indignation of Swift and Pope, the visionary acuity of Wordsworth... and the sensuous extravagance of Keats." Hecht is also in the same class as James Dickey, a previous Corrington Award winner. It is also worth noting that Hecht studied with John Crowe Ransom at Kenyon College, and then with Allen Tate at NYU. Ransom and Tate were some of the pioneers of the Southern Literary Renaissance during the 1920s. There is a rumor that Hecht's poem, "More Light! More Light!", is a tribute to Ransom.

9. Anthony Hecht -- 1st Annual Arts Reunion (Literary Festival) -- Old Dominion Uni
Anthony hecht anthony Hecht has taught at various colleges and is nowat the University of Rochester. He was a Fellow of the American
http://courses.lib.odu.edu/litfest/1st/hecht.html
1st Annual ARTS REUNION
Old Dominion University
September 25-29, 1978 Anthony Hecht Anthony Hecht has taught at various colleges and is now at the University of Rochester. He was a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome and has been a Guggenheim Fellow twice. His works include A Summoning of Stones The Seven Deadly Sins: Poems The Hard Hours Millions of Strange Shadows , and the translation Seven Against Thebes . In 1968 he received the Pulitzer Prize. [extracted from 1978 brochure]
1st Annual Arts Reunion
Books Available
Web Sites

Photographs
...
Video

10. Hecht
Anthony Hecht (1923 ). a web guide to Anthony Hecht from literaryhistory.com.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/20thC/Hecht.htm
Anthony Hecht (1923 - ) a web guide to Anthony Hecht from literaryhistory.com main page 20th century outline authors, alphabetical 19th century authors General Articles http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/hecht.htm An introduction to Anthony Hecht, including critical commentary and links to articles on the Holocaust and WW II, from the Modern American Poetry Site (Univ. of Illinois). http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/light.htm Excerpts of critical commentary on "More Light" from Daniel Hoffman, Edward Hirsch, Peter Sacks, Ellen Miller Casey, and Joshua Charlson. http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/hill.htm Excerpts of critical commentary on "A Hill" from J.D. McClatchy, Willard Spiegelman, and Peter Sacks. http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=47 An introduction to the poet from the Academy of American Poets. http://www.interviews-with-poets.com/anthony-hecht/hecht-extracts.html Excerpts from an interview with Hecht, conducted by Philip Hoy, in the Between the Lines web site. http://www.interviews-with-poets.com/anthony-hecht/hecht-note.html

11. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht. Modern American Poetry Deaththe Whore from Flight Among the Tombs
http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/americanliterature/20thc-americanpoets/
Anthony Hecht (1923- ) Modern American Poetry:

12. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht. Very disciplined poet often uses the sonnet and thecanzoni as his form. Follows an ordered pattern of thought and
http://ksumail.kennesaw.edu/~jbocchi/PRES130B/tsld006.htm
Anthony Hecht
  • Very disciplined poet - often uses the sonnet and the canzoni as his form
  • Follows an ordered pattern of thought and emotion - enjoys both music and geometry
  • His poetry begins with words rather than concepts
  • Read and memorized extensively
Previous slide Next slide Back to first slide View graphic version

13. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht (1923). from AR Ammons and Anthony Hecht. Anthony Hecht,American Literature, 20th Century, Postmodern Period.
http://hermes.hrc.ntu.edu.tw/lctd/author/hecht/right.htm
Anthony Hecht (1923-) from A.R. Ammons and Anthony Hecht Anthony Hecht, American Literature, 20th Century, Postmodern Period

14. Anthony Hecht
Anthony Hecht. Tempest. The Darkness and the Light Poems. The Burdens of Formality Essays on the Poetry of Anthony Hecht. Authors H. ArtistActorActress.com.
http://www.artistactoractress.com/author/h/hecht_anthony.html
Anthony Hecht
Tempest The Darkness and the Light : Poems The Hidden Law : The Poetry of W.H. Auden The Art of the Lathe : Poems Collected Earlier Poems The Venetian vespers The Transparent Man : Poems Seven Against Thebes (Greek Tragedy in New Translations) The Venetian Vespers : Poems Obbligati : Essays in Criticism The Burdens of Formality : Essays on the Poetry of Anthony Hecht Authors: H ArtistActorActress.com

15. Anthony Hecht - The Academy Of American Poets
The Academy of American Poets presents a biography, photograph, and selected poems.
http://www.poets.org/LIT/poet/ahechfst.htm
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Anthony Hecht Anthony Hecht was born in New York City in 1923. His books of poetry include The Darkness and the Light (Alfred A. Knopf, 2001); Flight Among the Tombs The Transparent Man Collected Earlier Poems The Venetian Vespers Millions of Strange Shadows The Hard Hours (1967), which won the Pulitzer Prize; and A Summoning of Stones (1954). He is also author of On the Laws of Poetic Art: The Andrew Mellon Lectures, 1992 (1995) and Obbligati: Essays in Criticism (1986); co-translator of Aeschylus's Seven Against Thebes (with Helen Bacon, 1975); and editor of The Essential Herbert (1987) and Jiggery-Pokery: A Compendium of Double Dactyls (with John Hollander , 1967). He has received the Bollingen Prize, the Ruth Lilly Prize, the Loines Award, the Librex-Guggenheim Eugenio Montale Award, and the Harriet Monroe Poetry Award, and fellowships from The Academy of American Poets, the American Academy in Rome, the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Rockefeller Foundation. A Chancellor Emeritus of The Academy of American Poets, he lives in Washington, D.C. This bio was last updated on Jul 2, 2001.

16. Poetry: Anthony Hecht
anthony hecht (b. 1923). LINKS. No links at this time.
http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/hecht.htm
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Anthony Hecht (b. 1923)
LINKS
Modern American Poetry on Anthony Hecht

http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/hecht.htm

The Modern American Poetry site provides information on Hecht, comments on and reviews of his work, and links to related sites. Modern American Poetry is an online journal and multimedia companion to Anthology of Modern American Poetry (Oxford University Press, 2000), edited by Cary Nelson.
The Academy of American Poets: Poetry Exhibits?Anthony Hecht
http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=47

The Academy of American Poets offers a biography of Hecht, audio recordings and the text of a selection of his works, and links to related sites.
Excerpts from Anthony Hecht in Conversation with Philip Hoy
http://www.interviews-with-poets.com/anthony-hecht/

17. A.R. Ammons And Anthony Hecht
Read the poems An Improvisation for Angular Momentum and A Letter, by these contemporary poets.
http://www.diacenter.org/prg/poetry/94_95/amhecht.html
October 24, 1994
155 Mercer Street, NYC, 7:30pm
Introduced by Harold Bloom
Biography
poem: AN IMPROVISATION FOR ANGULAR MOMENTUM
Biography
poem: A LETTER
www.diacenter.org

18. About Anthony Hecht
About anthony hecht. Glyn Maxwell. hecht was born in New York City. Copyright© 1994 by Oxford University Press. Return to anthony hecht.
http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/hecht/life.htm
About Anthony Hecht Glyn Maxwell H echt was born in New York City. He graduated from Bard College in 1944 and served in the army in Europe and Japan. After the war he studied at Kenyon College, where he began a long and distinguished career as a professor, most recently at Georgetown University, Washington. His second collection, The Hard Hours, won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1968; his many other awards include the Bollingen Prize and the Librex-Guggenheim Eugenio Montale Award. Apart from five poetry collections, he has published critical essays ( Obbligati, 1986), light verse ( Jiggery-Pokery , 1967, with John Hollander), and translation, most notably of Aeschylus ( Seven Against Thebes, 1973, with Helen Bacon) and Joseph Brodsky. Some recent editions of his work ( Collected Earlier Poems and The Transparent Man, both New York and Oxford, 1990) employ on their covers a photograph of the poet's face reflected in a mirroron the latter book a photographic negativemost appropriate images for his substantial and remarkable oeuvre, which holds the glass up to this worst of centuries and looks it squarely in the eye, neither glossing its beauty nor flinching from its horror. The work of Anthony Hecht shatters the cosy notion that a fragmented, fractured age should be reflected in the forms of its art, that ugliness and shapelessness demand payment in kind. Like Auden, he has absorbed the evils and grotesqueries of his unhappy century into a verse both highly formal and all-encompassing, stitching wounds with iambs, sculpting pentameters of sustained, Latinate beauty, sounding a healing music.

19. Anthony Hecht - The Academy Of American Poets
anthony hecht The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selectedpoems, and links as part of its online poetry exhibits. anthony hecht.
http://www.poets.org/academy/news/ahech
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Anthony Hecht Anthony Hecht was born in New York City in 1923. His books of poetry include The Darkness and the Light (Alfred A. Knopf, 2001); Flight Among the Tombs The Transparent Man Collected Earlier Poems The Venetian Vespers Millions of Strange Shadows The Hard Hours (1967), which won the Pulitzer Prize; and A Summoning of Stones (1954). He is also author of On the Laws of Poetic Art: The Andrew Mellon Lectures, 1992 (1995) and Obbligati: Essays in Criticism (1986); co-translator of Aeschylus's Seven Against Thebes (with Helen Bacon, 1975); and editor of The Essential Herbert (1987) and Jiggery-Pokery: A Compendium of Double Dactyls (with John Hollander , 1967). He has received the Bollingen Prize, the Ruth Lilly Prize, the Loines Award, the Librex-Guggenheim Eugenio Montale Award, and the Harriet Monroe Poetry Award, and fellowships from The Academy of American Poets, the American Academy in Rome, the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Rockefeller Foundation. A Chancellor Emeritus of The Academy of American Poets, he lives in Washington, D.C. This bio was last updated on Jul 2, 2001.

20. Sestina
Advice by Damon McLaughlin on how to write a sestina, with an example by anthony hecht. Part of a course at the University of Northern Iowa called The Craft of Poetry.
http://www.uni.edu/english/craft/sestina.html
Sestina
Syllabus
Craft of Poetry Home
Sestina tends to have a scary ring to it, and I imagine many fall back with a look of fright at the mere sound of the word. We all have, it's all right. A little pactice and the sestina can be a very rewarding exercise for any poet looking for a challenge. The sestina is yet another fun, French form, and it is divided into 6 sestets (six line stanzas) and 1 triplet called an envoi which is just a concluding stanza that is half the size of the rest. Unless you wish to make the sestina harder than it already may be, it is usually unrhymed and works by repeating the end words of each line. The envoi contains, in any order, all of the six end-words. The catch is that one has to be buried in each line and another must be at the end of the line. The pattern for repeating the words is like this: (stanza A) 123456, (stanza B) 615243. This 615243 pattern is how each of the "next" stanzas are made. The first way to learn this pattern is to look at a sestina. "Sestina d'Inverno" by Anthony Hecht: Here in this bleak city of Rochester

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