Dante in China

by John Barr

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In John Barr's poems, the ancient masters encounter the modern world. Dante on a beach in China beholds the Inferno: “Flaring well gas night and day, / towers rise as if to say, / Pollution can be beautiful.” Bach’s final fugue informs all of nature. Villon is admonished by an aging courtesan. Aristotle finds “Demagogues are the insects of politics. / Like water beetles they stay afloat / on surface tension, they taxi on iridescence.” And his afterlife: “When three-headed Cerberus greeted him / Socrates replied: I won’t need / an attack dog, thank

you. I married one.”
  • ISBN13 9781597090414
  • Publish Date 23 August 2018 (first published 10 July 2018)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Red Hen Press
  • Format Paperback (US Trade)
  • Pages 88
  • Language English