Essays

by and on Amy Clampitt


 

In this section, you can read selected essays by Amy Clampitt from her collection Predecessors, Et Cetera—the title essay was a lecture initially delivered at Clampitt's alma mater, Grinnell College. The other selected essays show Clampitt as a reader, one considering the poems of fellow poet-of-the-natural-world Marianne Moore, the other a discussion of the correspondence of Henry James and Clampitt's Lenox, Massachussets, neighbor-across-time, Edith Wharton. The Amy Clampitt Poetry Series is held annually at Wharton’s estate, The Mount.

Also included here are essays about Clampitt's poetry from the Winter 1993 issue of Verse magazine, which contained a section entitled “Amy Clampitt: Poems, Essays, Tributes” edited by Bonnie Costello.

In 1965, Clampitt wrote the afterword for a children's picture book entitled Two Is Company, Three’s a Crowd in her capacity as a former librarian of the Audubon Society; this previously uncollected prose can also be found here.

Mary Jo Salter’s foreword to The Collected Poems of Amy Clampitt and Willard Spiegelman’s introduction to Love Amy: The Selected Letters of Amy Clampitt can be found in the biography section of this site.

 

Essays by Amy Clampitt
From Predecessors, Et Cetera: Essays (U of M Press, 1991)

 

Predecessors,

Et Cetera

by Amy Clampitt

Marianne Moore

by Amy Clampitt

 

“Dearest Edith”

(on Edith Wharton

& Henry James)

by Amy Clampitt

 

Essays on Amy Clampitt
from the Winter, 1993 issue of Verse magazine

 
 
 
 

Click on the essays below to read the full text

 

Theatricality and Interiority:

Amy Clampitt’s Performances

by Celeste Goodridge

Amy Clampitt:

Nomad Exquisit

by Bonnie Costello

Amy Clampitt’s

Dahlia Gardens

by Vijay Seshadri

Vision as Appetite:

Clampitt as Naturalist

by Barbara Jordan

“Nucleus of Fire”:

Amy Clampitt’s Elegies

for Her Parents

by Jahan Ramazani

Amy Clampitt’s Elegiaic Witnessing

by Susan Snively

 
 

Additional Writings
by Amy Clampitt

 

Afterword to the Children’s book Two is Company, Three’s A Crowd: A Wild Goodse Tale

by Amy Clampitt