Falconry and other poems
by
John William Houghton


Photographs by William Ames Bascom

…The lilac's florets make
A shape that isn't there, a volume sketched
By fancy in the service of the mind's
Desire to know a world that has no gaps,
As moments of our being sketch out lives
Until we fill the gaps prepared for us.

--"An Ode on St. Cuthbert's Day"

ISBN 1-558832-092-8
Price: $12.99

 

About the Book: Houghton's verse has been described as "a seamless modernization of Robert Frost." The characters of these poems show us glimpses of a spiritual world hidden, not in the forest paths and stone fences of New England, but in the equally rugged landscape of human relationships. Striking imagery illuminates the "inscape" of Houghton's characters, and the metrical discipline undergirding their seemingly natural speech reflects the labor of structuring one's life. While a few of the poems have appeared over the last thirty years in such publications as The Living Church and The Classical Outlook, this is Houghton's first book-length collection.

…If halted in her lifelong pilgrimage,
The peregrine can patiently be tamed,
Though at the price of seeming cruelty:
Her eyelids must at first be seeled, sewn shut,
Her food doled out by that one hand alone
Which purposes to master her wild heart.
Once manned, the falcon learns to ride,
In hood and jesses, with the falconer, or, leashed,
To perch upon a block; to come when lured;
And most of all, to stoop and carry back
Her prey in trade for some small scrap of meat.
Is this the captive soul: first blinded, starved,
Tied down by triple cords of Truth, Desire,
And Sloth, which braid the nature of the world?

--"Falconry"

One Reviewer Writes: Houghton's grasp of cadence, rhythm, strophe, and tone is masterful and confident....His use of syncopated rhythm, and lyrical metaphor, combine to make poetry that is reminescent of the classicists. Clearly, Houghton is familiar with the workings behind 'the poem', to put it simply--'poetics'. The words from John William Houghton flow like a stream, rise up and connect the soul to the stars with a yearning for the lovely, the enlightened, the lucid. This reviewer can offer no "stock response" to the likes of the poetry from the man who wrote "Falconry and other poems." Get this book!

--Penny Lynn Dunn, Editor, "Tacenda"

About the Author: John William Houghton, born in 1953, grew up in Culver, Indiana, a town his family founded in 1844. A prize-winning historian and a Fellow of the Episcopal Church Foundation, with degrees from Harvard, Yale, Indiana and Notre Dame, he has also served as Assistant Literary Editor of the St. Louis magazine of the arts, River Styx, and contributed to the HarperCollins Encyclopedia of Catholicism. He has taught English and Religious Studies, and served as a school chaplain. His fantasy novel, Rough Magicke, will be available to order from booksellers in January, 2005.