A Vision of Ceremony is a collection of poems by Australian writer James McAuley, published by Angus and Robertson in 1956.[1]

A Vision of Ceremony
AuthorJames McAuley
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry collection
PublisherAngus and Robertson
Publication date
1956
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages69 pp.
Awards1956 Grace Leven Prize for Poetry

The collection contains 31 poems, most of which had been previously published in Australian literary publications such as The Bulletin, Hermes, Meanjin, Southerly and various original poetry anthologies.[2]

Contents

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  • "Invocation"
  • "Black Swans : 1946-1955"
  • "At Dawn"
  • "Jesus"
  • "To a Dead Bird of Paradise"
  • "Mating Swans"
  • "Tune for Swans"
  • "Memorial (to Some residents of New Guinea)"
  • "Sequence"
  • "Canticle"
  • "To the Holy Spirit"
  • "Nativity"
  • "An Art of Poetry"
  • "Palm"
  • "Prefiguration"
  • "New Guinea"
  • "Meditation (from Hugo von Hofmannsthal)"
  • "The Royal Fireworks"
  • "Prologue"
  • "The Middle of Life (from Friedrich Holderlin)"
  • "Vespers"
  • "Late Winter"
  • "Celebration of Divine Love"
  • "To Any Poet"
  • "A Leaf of Sage"
  • "The Hero and the Hydra"
  • "Prometheus : A Secular Masque"
  • "The Death of Chiron"
  • "The Ascent of Heracles"
  • "The Tomb of Heracles"
  • "A Letter to John Dryden"

Critical reception

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Writing in The Bulletin a reviewer noted McAuley's "shrewd, nuggety plainness of style" and the poet being "more often digged than solemn."[3]

Ian Mair, in The Age, thought of the poet that the "irony and hard glitter that once he had have now gone" cloncluding that McAuley is best "when he is a romantic."[4]

Awards

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "A Vision of Ceremony by James McAuley". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  2. ^ "A Vision of Ceremony by James McAuley". Austlit. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
  3. ^ ""James McAuley's Poems"". The Bulletin, 31 October 1956, p2. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
  4. ^ ""James McAuley's New Poems"". The Age, 6 October 1956, p19. ProQuest 2520409045. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Austlit — A Vision of Ceremony – Awards by James McAuley". Austlit. Retrieved 22 November 2024.