An Origin Like Water: Collected Poems 1967­-1987

Published in 1997
208 pages

epub

mobi


Born in Dublin in 1944, Eavan Boland studied in Ireland, London and New York. Her first book was published in 1967. She taught at Trinity College, University College Dublin, Bowdoin College, the University of Iowa, and Stanford University. A pioneering figure in Irish poetry, Boland’s works include The Journey and other poems (1987), Night Feed (1994), The Lost Land (1998) and Code (2001). Her poems and essays appeared in magazines such as The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Kenyon Review and American Poetry Review. She was a regular reviewer for the Irish Times. She was married to the novelist Kevin Casey.

What is this book about?
Here, from one of our major poets, is the collected early work that has been long unavailable in this country. Included in this volume is the work from Eavan Boland’s five early volumes of poetry: New TerritoryThe War HorseIn Her Own ImageNight Feed, and The Journey.

The poems from Boland’s first book, New Territory, show her to be, at twenty-two, a master of formal verse reflecting Irish history and myth. This collection charts the ways in which Boland’s work breaks from poetic tradition, honors it, and reinvents it. Poems like “Anorexic,” “Mastectomy,” and “Witching” have an intensity reminiscent of Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton. In later poems, her subjects become more personal, sequencing Boland’s life as a woman, poet, and mother. Boland writes, “I grew to understand the Irish poetic tradition only when I went into exile with it,” becoming, in effect, “a displaced person / in a pastoral chaos.”

This collection demonstrates how Boland’s mature voice developed from the poetics of inner exile into a subtle, flexible idiom uniquely her own.