Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Moonlight Acre

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
1938

Pages
  
71

Author
  
R. D. Fitzgerald

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1938

Page count
  
71

Preceded by
  
The Greater Apollo : Seven Metaphysical Songs

Publisher
  
Melbourne University Publishing

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Moonlight Acre (1938) is a collection of poems by Australian poet R. D. Fitzgerald. It won the ALS Gold Medal in 1938.

Contents

Contents

  • "Moonlight Acre"
  • "Copernicus"
  • "The Hidden Bole"
  • "Essay on Memory"
  • Critical reception

    On its original publication in Australia a reviewer in The Sydney Morning Herald was rather unstinting in their praise by stating "This slim volume contains work of such a high order that it should go far to establish Mr. FitzGerald as one of the finest contemporary poets writing in English." They went on to state: "Although it avoids the wilful obscurity and recondite allusions of many younger English poets, misled by Eliot and Pound, it can challenge them bravely on their own ground of intellectual subtlety. Mr. FitzGerald, moreover, has a poetic advantage over his English contemporaries in that, while they wrestle over political and social problems, he grapples with the larger issues of man and his universe".

    The reviewer in The Telegraph (Brisbane) looked more deeply into the poems in the collection: "The poems are not easy reading, each presenting certain difficulties arising from the author's labours in attempting to solve his intellectual-emotional problems, a task artistically but not spiritually fruitful. Mostly of iambic pulse, the poems are tinctured with a metaphysical mysticism, partly pure pagan and partly the issue of a mind influenced by modern psychology and biology. The incongruity of such a mental mixture is evidenced by the poet's analysis and synthesis. Gravely disturbed by human conditions, he arraigns Peace and champions the sword of War as a cleansing scourge."

    References

    Moonlight Acre Wikipedia