AustLit logo

AustLit

Caspar David single work   poetry   "Moon at dusk"
Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 Caspar David
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

All Publication Details

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Tamba no. 53 Summer 2013 6994801 2013 periodical issue 2013 pg. 40
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Mountain Secrets Joan Fenney (editor), Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2019 17689367 2019 anthology poetry

    'Mountains are constant but continually changing. Captive to the seasons, they reveal many faces: in winter shrouded in snow and mist, yet so visibly majestic in the summer months that they appear to touch the sky. Lost in clouds at times, so discernible at others. Places of solitude yet at the mercy of mountaineers who swarm them. Both revered and feared; mystical and earthy; elusive but tangible. Does the mystery of mountains lie in the many paradoxes that surround them?

    'Join more than 150 poets from across Australia in a tantalising exploration of mountains around the world, real and imagined, literal and figurative.'  (Publication summary)

    Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2019
    pg. 99
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Sacredly Profane Kevin Densley , Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2020 20838756 2020 selected work poetry

    '‘Sacredly Profane has all the outstanding qualities of Kevin Densleys previous collections - sparky lyricism, revealing jaunts down the byways of history, an abiding fascination with overlapping high and low cultures - but also a new, and strangely timely, element: deep, resonant pathos. Readers can still find sea-horses delicate as embryos, dreamy girlfriends naked in Arcady and childhood athletes shattered like meringues, but also the erasure of families from a bleak landscape (There is nothing but shifting sand”) and, in a major sequence on the Great War, Percy Black of the handlebar moustache, chiselled jaw, dark wavy hair and barrel chest” and gunshot wounds, gas attacks and letters that stop, forever. It is a turn which only deepens and enhances those other elements.

    'Densleys work makes us stand back and look at our assumptions about life, art and the politics of them both.  What really motivates the corrupt local mayor to stand on a podium, flexing a copy of a poetry magazine on launch day at the suburban university? Where else would a child feel the fleeting pull of holy yellow light but St Matthews Anglican Church, East Geelong? And who but great-great grandfather William, breeder of prize-winning hens and roosters, could brood from a century-old wedding photograph without donning a tie, and wearing shoes that could do with a polish? Nothing in Sacredly Profane provides the answers, but then nothing should. Instead, let the lines spin out and the words pick up their marvellous, higgledy dance, till they leave you on the far shore more desolate than in earlier days, but also more hopeful gasping and reeling and pop-eyed with gratitude.- James Roderick Burns, Other Poetry /, Author of The Worksongs of the Worms.' (Publication summary)

    Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2020
    pg. 60
X