By John Holmes
Newly available in
paperback, Darwin’s Bards is the
first comprehensive study of how poets have responded to the ideas of Charles
Darwin in over fifty years. John Holmes argues that poetry can have a profound
impact on how we think and feel about the Darwinian condition. Is a Darwinian
universe necessarily a godless one? What is our own place in the Darwinian
universe, and our ecological role here on Earth? How does our kinship with
other animals affect how we see them and ourselves?
Holmes explores the ways
in which some of the most perceptive and powerful British and American poets of
the last hundred-and-fifty years have grappled with these questions, from
Alfred Tennyson and Robert Browning, through Thomas Hardy and Robert Frost, to
Ted Hughes, Thom Gunn, Amy Clampitt and Edwin Morgan. Including over fifty
poems and substantial extracts from many more, Darwin’s Bards gives us the chance
to experience for ourselves what it can mean to live in a Darwinian world.
Available on Amazon and Edinburgh University Press