Like Roethke and Warren, Richard Wilbur blends classicism and philosophy with humble images: "Throughout his career Wilbur has shown, within the compass of his classicism, enviable variety. His poems describe fountains and fire trucks, grasshoppers and toads, European cities and country pleasures. All of them are easy to read, while being suffused with an astonishing verbal music and a compacted thoughtfulness that invite sustained reflection" ("Richard Wilbur," Poets.org, 2010). Like Roethke, Wilbur's use of nature tends to be personal, even though Wilbur's diction is more formal and archaic in tone than "My Papa's Waltz." For example, in "The Writer," Wilbur writes of his young daughter, writing a story in her room, and compares her effort to chasing a frightened starling out of her room: "It is always a matter, my darling, / of life or death, as I had forgotten. I wish / What I wished you before, but harder."
As with Warren, in Wilbur's poetry about the natural world mirrors the poet's interior state. But rather than deliberately attempting to create elaborate metaphors about nature, Wilbur makes...
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