Progressions of the Mind: Poems

David Berman's posthumous collection Progressions of the Mind abounds in sagacity, empathy, and wit. Often in sonnet form, this former lawyer's meditations on humanity may be poignant or humorous, but they are always entertaining. He deftly interrogates commonplace notions of morality, religious beliefs, and human frailties and resilience. Readers of this collection will understand why Berman was such a respected and beloved figure among the Powow River Poets.

PRAISE FOR PROGRESSIONS OF THE MIND

David Berman's drive, character and intelligence took him from a Florida orphanage to Harvard Law School, as well as the poetry workshops of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish. His poems-witty, introspective, and impeccably crafted-always reflect a deep love of language and empathy for other people.

-A.M. Juster, author of Wonder and Wrath

In Progressions of the Mind, David Berman's first full-length collection, published posthumously, the reader new to his work will discover technical proficiency of the highest order in the writing of formal verse, and also encounter a restless, relentlessly probing, rigorously disciplined intellect devoted to learning, not for learning's sake so much as for how learning can clarify, justify, and endeavor to make sense of one unique and complex life. Like Wallace Stevens, David Berman lived a secret life of poetry, and wrote prolifically. These poems, selected and arranged by David himself in 2009, provide only a representative sampling of his vast body of work, yet can serve to introduce this extraordinary and gifted writer to those who did not have the good fortune to know him as a colleague, a fellow poet, and a cherished friend.

-Bruce Bennett, author of Just Another Day in Just Our Town

In language clear as the finest diamonds, with a surgeon's precision and a philosopher's devotion to honest, complex thought, the late David Berman put together a collection of flawlessly wrought poems both dazzling and sobering. They include accounts of criminal behavior, often in the voice of the perpetrator (Berman was a prominent lawyer); subtle, revealing exchanges with the living and the dead; portraits tender and not so tender; vulnerable, candid self-examination; unexpected views of religion, and wit capable of shocking as it pierces the target. This record of a thoroughly "examined" life by a highly intelligent man known for his reserve is a book to learn from, and to treasure.

-Rhina P. Espaillat, author of And After All

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

David Berman (1934-2017) was born on September 11, 1934, in New York City and raised in Hollywood, Florida. He was licensed as an attorney in 1963. From 1967 until his death, he had a private practice in the Boston area with an emphasis on business litigation. While at Harvard, he was frequently published in the Harvard Advocate. Over the years, Berman published poems in literary journals such as the Formalist, Piedmont Literary Review, Sparrow, Orbis, Iambs and Trochees, and Pivot. He also published three chapbooks: Future Imperfect (State Street Press, 1982), Slippage (Robert L. Barth, 1996), and David Berman: Greatest Hits 1965-2002 (Pudding House, 2002). A student of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish, Berman was a longtime member of the Powow River Poets of Newburyport, Massachusetts. In addition, he was a member of the Harvard Club, a trustee of the Cantata Singers, and Vice Échanson and Vice Conseiller Gastronomique Honoraire of the Boston chapter of La Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. He passed away on June 22, 2017, after battling cancer for several months.

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Progressions of the Mind: Poems

David Berman's posthumous collection Progressions of the Mind abounds in sagacity, empathy, and wit. Often in sonnet form, this former lawyer's meditations on humanity may be poignant or humorous, but they are always entertaining. He deftly interrogates commonplace notions of morality, religious beliefs, and human frailties and resilience. Readers of this collection will understand why Berman was such a respected and beloved figure among the Powow River Poets.

PRAISE FOR PROGRESSIONS OF THE MIND

David Berman's drive, character and intelligence took him from a Florida orphanage to Harvard Law School, as well as the poetry workshops of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish. His poems-witty, introspective, and impeccably crafted-always reflect a deep love of language and empathy for other people.

-A.M. Juster, author of Wonder and Wrath

In Progressions of the Mind, David Berman's first full-length collection, published posthumously, the reader new to his work will discover technical proficiency of the highest order in the writing of formal verse, and also encounter a restless, relentlessly probing, rigorously disciplined intellect devoted to learning, not for learning's sake so much as for how learning can clarify, justify, and endeavor to make sense of one unique and complex life. Like Wallace Stevens, David Berman lived a secret life of poetry, and wrote prolifically. These poems, selected and arranged by David himself in 2009, provide only a representative sampling of his vast body of work, yet can serve to introduce this extraordinary and gifted writer to those who did not have the good fortune to know him as a colleague, a fellow poet, and a cherished friend.

-Bruce Bennett, author of Just Another Day in Just Our Town

In language clear as the finest diamonds, with a surgeon's precision and a philosopher's devotion to honest, complex thought, the late David Berman put together a collection of flawlessly wrought poems both dazzling and sobering. They include accounts of criminal behavior, often in the voice of the perpetrator (Berman was a prominent lawyer); subtle, revealing exchanges with the living and the dead; portraits tender and not so tender; vulnerable, candid self-examination; unexpected views of religion, and wit capable of shocking as it pierces the target. This record of a thoroughly "examined" life by a highly intelligent man known for his reserve is a book to learn from, and to treasure.

-Rhina P. Espaillat, author of And After All

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

David Berman (1934-2017) was born on September 11, 1934, in New York City and raised in Hollywood, Florida. He was licensed as an attorney in 1963. From 1967 until his death, he had a private practice in the Boston area with an emphasis on business litigation. While at Harvard, he was frequently published in the Harvard Advocate. Over the years, Berman published poems in literary journals such as the Formalist, Piedmont Literary Review, Sparrow, Orbis, Iambs and Trochees, and Pivot. He also published three chapbooks: Future Imperfect (State Street Press, 1982), Slippage (Robert L. Barth, 1996), and David Berman: Greatest Hits 1965-2002 (Pudding House, 2002). A student of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish, Berman was a longtime member of the Powow River Poets of Newburyport, Massachusetts. In addition, he was a member of the Harvard Club, a trustee of the Cantata Singers, and Vice Échanson and Vice Conseiller Gastronomique Honoraire of the Boston chapter of La Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. He passed away on June 22, 2017, after battling cancer for several months.

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Progressions of the Mind: Poems

Progressions of the Mind: Poems

by David Berman
Progressions of the Mind: Poems

Progressions of the Mind: Poems

by David Berman

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Overview

David Berman's posthumous collection Progressions of the Mind abounds in sagacity, empathy, and wit. Often in sonnet form, this former lawyer's meditations on humanity may be poignant or humorous, but they are always entertaining. He deftly interrogates commonplace notions of morality, religious beliefs, and human frailties and resilience. Readers of this collection will understand why Berman was such a respected and beloved figure among the Powow River Poets.

PRAISE FOR PROGRESSIONS OF THE MIND

David Berman's drive, character and intelligence took him from a Florida orphanage to Harvard Law School, as well as the poetry workshops of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish. His poems-witty, introspective, and impeccably crafted-always reflect a deep love of language and empathy for other people.

-A.M. Juster, author of Wonder and Wrath

In Progressions of the Mind, David Berman's first full-length collection, published posthumously, the reader new to his work will discover technical proficiency of the highest order in the writing of formal verse, and also encounter a restless, relentlessly probing, rigorously disciplined intellect devoted to learning, not for learning's sake so much as for how learning can clarify, justify, and endeavor to make sense of one unique and complex life. Like Wallace Stevens, David Berman lived a secret life of poetry, and wrote prolifically. These poems, selected and arranged by David himself in 2009, provide only a representative sampling of his vast body of work, yet can serve to introduce this extraordinary and gifted writer to those who did not have the good fortune to know him as a colleague, a fellow poet, and a cherished friend.

-Bruce Bennett, author of Just Another Day in Just Our Town

In language clear as the finest diamonds, with a surgeon's precision and a philosopher's devotion to honest, complex thought, the late David Berman put together a collection of flawlessly wrought poems both dazzling and sobering. They include accounts of criminal behavior, often in the voice of the perpetrator (Berman was a prominent lawyer); subtle, revealing exchanges with the living and the dead; portraits tender and not so tender; vulnerable, candid self-examination; unexpected views of religion, and wit capable of shocking as it pierces the target. This record of a thoroughly "examined" life by a highly intelligent man known for his reserve is a book to learn from, and to treasure.

-Rhina P. Espaillat, author of And After All

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

David Berman (1934-2017) was born on September 11, 1934, in New York City and raised in Hollywood, Florida. He was licensed as an attorney in 1963. From 1967 until his death, he had a private practice in the Boston area with an emphasis on business litigation. While at Harvard, he was frequently published in the Harvard Advocate. Over the years, Berman published poems in literary journals such as the Formalist, Piedmont Literary Review, Sparrow, Orbis, Iambs and Trochees, and Pivot. He also published three chapbooks: Future Imperfect (State Street Press, 1982), Slippage (Robert L. Barth, 1996), and David Berman: Greatest Hits 1965-2002 (Pudding House, 2002). A student of Robert Lowell and Archibald MacLeish, Berman was a longtime member of the Powow River Poets of Newburyport, Massachusetts. In addition, he was a member of the Harvard Club, a trustee of the Cantata Singers, and Vice Échanson and Vice Conseiller Gastronomique Honoraire of the Boston chapter of La Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. He passed away on June 22, 2017, after battling cancer for several months.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781773490618
Publisher: Able Muse Press
Publication date: 10/15/2021
Pages: 100
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.24(d)

About the Author

DAVID BERMAN (1934-2017) was born on September 11, 1934, in New York City and raised in Hollywood, Florida. Licensed as an attorney in 1963, Berman clerked for Justice Jacob Spiegel of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, and from 1964 to 1967 served as Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts under Edward Brooke. From 1967 until his death, he had a private practice in the Boston area with an emphasis on business litigation. Berman also had a parallel career as a poet. While working in Boston in the late 1950s, he took Robert Lowell's poetry seminar at Boston University. As a law student at Harvard, he was permitted to take Archibald MacLeish's poetry course, which he called the "high point" of his week, and where he met and befriended the poet Bruce Bennett. While at Harvard, he was frequently published in the Harvard Advocate. Over the years, Berman published a number of poems in literary journals such as the Formalist, Piedmont Literary Review, Sparrow, Orbis, Iambs and Trochees, and Pivot. He also published three chapbooks: Future Imperfect (State Street Press, 1982), Slippage (Robert L. Barth, 1996), and David Berman: Greatest Hits 1965-2002 (Pudding House, 2002). Berman was a longtime member of the Powow River Poets of Newburyport, Massachusetts. In addition, he was a member of the Harvard Club, a trustee of the Cantata Singers, and Vice Échanson and Vice Conseiller Gastronomique Honoraire of the Boston chapter of La Confrérie de la Chaîne des Rôtisseurs. He passed away on June 22, 2017, after battling cancer for several months.

Table of Contents

vi Acknowledgments

3 Progressions of the Mind

7 A Song for Lazarus

8 Heaven

9 Veiled Events

10 Witches

11 To One Who Described His Religious Preference as "Agnosticism"

12 Unrecited Declarations

13 Sacrifice

14 The Now of Nature's Art

15 Unwritten Letter

16 Divorce Court

17 The Inexplicable

18 Why I Waited

22 His Ex-Wife's Birthday

23 To You, Anonymously

24 Weekend Grandchildren

25 Evidence of Being Human

26 Dutiful

27 Settled

28 Recalling What Would Have Been Aunt Mary's Ninety-Sixth Birthday

29 The Clock-Watcher

30 The Nonagenarian's Daughter's Complaint

31 Mnemonics

32 Did You

33 Mother-in-Law

35 Mockingbird Call

36 De Senectute

37 Reproof

38 On Noticing a Reception for the Class of 1966 at the Harvard Club

39 At Fifty-Nine

40 Another Birthday Poem for Myself-at Seventy-Two

41 A Tour of the Interior

42 For Mr. First

43 Aunt and Uncle

45 Rain Days

46 Old Chairs

47 Unchanged

48 On Reading of a Proposal to Blow Up the Moon

49 A Reproach to the Reproacher

50 Reminders

51 Solutions

52 Forgetful

53 Lord Byron Lectures Us about Sex

55 A Soliloquy for Gabriel

58 Amos

59 Ezekiel

60 The Prisoner

61 Galatians

62 Would He Say This?

63 Male, Female, and the Church Fathers

64 No Doubt?

65 The Plagiarists

66 Bach

67 On Book II, Satire V, of Horace

68 To a Certain Poet

69 Comprehension Test

70 The Poet's Drug

71 Travelogue

72 Who Told You?

73 The Cave Dweller

74 For Hobo

75 Cat Ghost

76 To Summer Fading

77 Rural Christmas

78 A New Year's Poem

79 Early January

80 Grace

81 And the Others

82 The Effect of Hearing the Sublime

83 Oh Where

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