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On the other hand, Martz suggests that the term prophecy should not be limited to works that foretell the future, arguing that the biblical prophet is concerned primarily with the present. The prophet is a reformer, a denouncer of evil, as well as a seer of possible redemption. He hears "voices" and transmits the message of those voices to his people, in the hope of moving them away from wickedness and toward the ways of truth. According to Martz, such was the mission that inspired Walt Whitman and that Whitman passed on to Pound, Eliot, Williams, and Lawrence. (H. D. found her own sources of inspiration in Greek and Egyptian lore.) Martz's premise is that biblical prophecy, with its mingling of poetry and prose, its abrupt shifts from violent denunciation to exalted poetry, provides a precedent for the texture of these modernist works that will help readers to appreciate the mingling of "voices" and the complex mixture of elements. Examining their interrelationships and their common themes, Many Gods and Many Voices offers fresh insights into these modern writers. About the AuthorLouis L. Martz is Sterling Professor of English, Emeritus, at Yale University. He is author of five books on seventeenth- century poetry, including From Renaissance to Baroque: Essays on Literature and Art; and he has edited both the Collected Poems, 1912-1944 and the Selected Poems of H. D., as well as D.H. Lawrence's Quetzalcoatl (the early version of The Plumed Serpent). |
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