Roan Stallion, Tamar and Other Poems, Centennial Edition
By Robinson Jeffers
Foreword by Elliot Ruchowitz-Roberts, Afterword by Tim Hunt
Tor House Press, 2025
https://www.torhouse.org/tor-house-press/p/the-echo-vase-7drbh
Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962), a contemporary of Pound and Eliot, was in the 1920s and 1930s viewed as one of the most significant American poets. His explorations of narrative poetry and his long verse line contributed to several of the major New Critics dismissing his work when the classroom canon was initially formulated in the 1940s and 1950s, but his rejection of Imperialism, critique of modern mass society, and advocacy for environmental matters are leading to renewed interest in his work. A new edition of Roan Stallion, Tamar and Other Poems (1925), the collection that initially made his reputation, attempts to re-present his work in a manner that invites additional reappraisal of his craft and artistry.
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The pages of this centennial edition of Roan Stallion are landscape rather than portrait so that none of the long verse lines are doubled back because of the right margin. Also, the edition uses the corrected punctuation from The Collected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers (Stanford UP) and thus removes the additional layer of punctuation the typesetters added when the book was first published. These adjustments provide a clearer record of the momentum, modulations, and inflections of the poetry.
“The publication of the Roan Stallion/Tamar volume a century ago was a major event in American letters. It not only announced the arrival of a major poet, and a poet from the west far from, the eastern establishment; it also proclaimed and enacted a poetics antithetical to the modernist poetics of Pound and Williams. A different sense of poetic form, but also, more essentially, a different sense of the sources and ends of poetry. The wide format of William Everson’s hand press volume of Granite and Cypress some years ago was a revelation because it released Jeffers’s free verse line to run with full sweep and force without line-breaks. This centennial edition of Jeffers’s breakthrough volume gives us the poems at last in their full form.” —Albert Gelpi
“One can't fully understand the force and originality of Robinson Jeffers’s poetry until one sees his lines laid out exactly as they were written without the line breaks made necessary by commercial formats. I remember the startling clarity I experienced when I saw William Everson's Granite and Cypress. The new Tor House Press edition of Roan Stallion, Tamar & Other Poems makes it possible to see (as well as hear) the strange, tragic music that made Jeffers famous. I can't think of a better way to celebrate the centennial of Roan Stallion than to allow us to see the texts, clear and unbent, for the first time.” —Dana Gioia
“After The Waste Land and the early Cantos of Pound, or perhaps Marianne Moore’s Poems, Roan Stallion, Tamar and Other Poems was the second or third shock of modernist aesthetics to transform American poetry. This edition is the perfect way to recover that shock and its energy for a new generation of readers.” —Robert Hass
As a resource for instructors, Jeffers's first four trade collections are now available as PDFs from the Robinson Jeffers Association at https://robinsonjeffersassociation.org/his-writing/poetry/







