Description
Evoking comparisons to such contemporaries as JaneKenyon, Wendell Berry, and Denise Levertov, Clement explores the varied emotions of love, longing, and loss.
About the Author
Jane Tyson Clement (1917-2000) was a poet, teacher, writer, and mother of seven. Born to Quaker parents, she grew up in Manhattan. Though she lived there until she was nineteen, she was never truly at home in the city but preferred Bay Head, New Jersey, where the family owned a summer house. Bay Head's windswept shore drew Jane back year after year: "There was something eternal about it that was always a rock and an anchor for me." Jane graduated from Smith College in 1939. Still, she yearned to move beyond the "frivolous, self-centered side of my nature...and to do something - anything - about the unfair treatment of workers, the hoarding of wealth in the hands of a few." Eventually this search led her to God, though first through disillusionment and confusion. In 1954, Jane and her husband, Bob, joined the Bruderhof, a community movement dedicated to practicing Jesus' teachings of nonviolence, economic equality, and social justice.
Reviews
Written in spare language, deceptively simple yet with measured directness...Clement's poetry seems to well out of the quiet of a centered being. -- Friends Journal
Beneath the verse stirs a burning, unquenchable flame. Faith and radical optimism permeate these poems. -- St. Anthony's Messenger
Book Information
ISBN 9780874869002
Author Jane Tyson Clement
Format Paperback
Page Count 170
Imprint Plough Publishing House
Publisher Plough Publishing House
Weight(grams) 226g
Dimensions(mm) 177mm * 127mm * 19mm