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'In much of Francis Webb's poetry "the tale brings death" ("A Drum for Ben Boyd") but death remains largely off-stage. The poetry eschews the space of death and seems unwilling to explore the possibility of nothingness. There is a significant change, however, that is particularly noticeable in Webb's last three published poems. This paper focuses on the naming of death in "Sturt and the Vultures" but it traces first a progression in Webb's poetry - from "A Death at Winson Green" through "Socrates" and "Rondo Burleske: Mahler's Ninth" - in which the poet seems increasingly ready to contemplate the possibilities of the void.'
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Last amended 12 Dec 2013 14:59:50
http://nla.gov.au/nla.arc-63067-20090910-1633-www.nla.gov.au/openpublish/index.php/jasal/article/view/9.3/1787.html
Tracing the Spectre of Death in Francis Webb's Last Poems
JASAL
Subjects:
- A Drum for Ben Boyd 1948 sequence poetry
- A Death at Winson Green 1954 single work poetry
- Sturt and the Vultures 1970 single work poetry
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