Richard Wilbur dedicates the new poems in his 2004 collection to his wife, Charlee, “in this and the other kingdom”. The phrase, which comes from his delightful poem “Complaint” (
Walking in to Sleep1969), does not seem to mean exclusively an afterlife. It reflects his life-long dedication to the time-bound world and interest in its other—infinity. It is attainable on earth, as explicitly stated in the title of his poem “Attention Makes Infinity” (
The Beautiful Changes and Other Poems, 1947). The “other kingdom” can also be a glimpse of divinity or a mysterious dimension, which humanity co-opts from dreams. It may allude to other poetic consciousnesses (for example, Edgar Allan Poe, with whom Wilbur has an affinity and a quarrel on the far-flung Beyond, W.H. Auden,…
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Citation: Wai, Isabella. "Richard Wilbur". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 08 March 2009; last revised 05 September 2022. [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4715, accessed 21 November 2024.]