Publisher's Synopsis
Poetry. Austin Messick, conducting his fictional poet Duncan McKnight to the realm of the dead, recovers the living source of Orphic imagination, glimmering still in the deepest recesses of the language-cave. Calling Authorship into question, Messick, in the voice of McKnight, admits 'This writing / does not belong / to me.' Instead, the writing reaches down to the roots of poetry as shamanic, self-transcending ritual, as a performance, of what Plato called 'divine madness.' Messick pushes his poet-hero to the point where an unknown, cadence language, at once new and ancient, takes hold of the work, becoming the apotheosis of inspired speech. Messick shows us that to 'sing alone with another's voice' is to discover the oracular nature of poetry itself.--Andrew Joron