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“Coming Home at Twilight in Late Summer” by Jane Kenyon (1983)
This poem, while different in perspective and content from “Let Evening Come,” occupies a similar space, contrasting the natural with the domestic (the pear tree contrasted with the house chores that need to be done). Kenyon was fond of weaving these two elements together. “Coming Home at Twilight in Late Summer” and “Let Evening Come” are two examples of this fixation.
“Her Garden” by Donald Hall (2006)
Donald Hall, Jane Kenyon’s husband, was a prominent poet himself. “Her Garden,” written after Kenyon’s death, is a poem likely in response to her death and what she left behind. Reading Hall’s poems offers an insight into Kenyon’s. Originally Hall’s student, Kenyon and Hall shared a life together, each writing poems that offer insights into the other as a poet and a person.
“The Clearing” by Jane Kenyon (1986)
“The Clearing” demonstrates another example of Kenyon’s preoccupations as a poet: An interest in nature, domesticity, and rural life on a farm. Many of Kenyon’s poems, like this one, are written from the first-person perspective. Reading Kenyon’s poems will give readers an idea as to how “Let Evening Come” deviates from Kenyon’s more typical poems written as free verse meditations.
“Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon Discuss their Marriage and Work.” Interview with WHYY Fresh Air (1993)
This interview with Kenyon and Hall offers insight into their life together as a married couple and as poets. Kenyon was working on her collection Constance at the time of the interview and was yet to be diagnosed with leukemia, of which she would die two years following this recording.
“Review: The Poetry of Jane Kenyon, Who Died Tragically Young 25 Years Ago.” by The National Book Review (2020)
This in-depth article on Kenyon, her poems, and her life offers an important homage to a poet who was just coming into her own as a poet only to die at the age of 47 in 1995. The article reviews a recent collection released by Graywolf Press, The Best Poems of Jane Kenyon and revisits her work with insight and passion 25 years after her death.
“The Poetry of Death” by Donald Hall (2017)
Published in The New Yorker, this essay by Hall, Kenyon’s husband, 22 years following her death offers an eye into life together as poets and as husband and wife. Poignant and emotional, Hall talks of elegy and death.
Listen to Kenyon read her poem from her home at Eagle Pond Farm in New Hampshire. This is a 2019 posting on YouTube of an earlier recording.
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By Jane Kenyon