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Robert Lax

Robert Lax (November 30, 1915 – September 26, 2000) was an American poet, known in particular for his association with Trappist monk and writer Thomas Merton. Another friend of his youth was the painter Ad Reinhardt. After a long period of drifting from job to job about the world, Lax settled on the island of Patmos during the latter part of his life. Considered by some to be a self-exiled hermit, he nonetheless welcomed visitors to his home, but did nothing to court publicity or expand his literary career or reputation.[1]

Robert Lax
Born(1915-11-30)November 30, 1915
DiedSeptember 26, 2000(2000-09-26) (aged 84)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materColumbia University (BA)
Occupations
  • writer
  • editor
  • professor

Life edit

Lax was born in Olean to Sigmund and Rebecca Lax. His father had immigrated to the United States from Austria at the age of sixteen. When Robert was in eighth grade, the family moved to Elmhurst, Queens. He first met the future painter Ad Reinhardt at Elmhurst's Newtown High School.[2]

Lax attended Columbia University in New York City, where he studied with the poet and critic Mark Van Doren. As a student there in the late 1930s, he worked on the college humor magazine Jester with a classmate who became a close lifetime friend, Thomas Merton. Others on the Jester staff were Ed Rice, founder and editor of Jubilee magazine (to which all three men contributed in the 1950s and '60s) and Ad Reinhardt.[3] In his biography, The Seven Storey Mountain, Merton describes Lax at a meeting with other Jester staff: "Taller than them all, and more serious, with a long face, like a horse, and a great mane of black hair on top of it, Bob Lax meditated on some incomprehensible woe."[4] Mark Van Doren has commented that "The woe, I now believe, was that Lax could not state his bliss; his love of the world and all things, all persons in it".[5]

After graduating in 1938, Lax joined the staff of The New Yorker, working his way up from assistant poetry editor; he was also poetry editor of Time magazine, wrote screenplays in Hollywood, and taught at both the University of North Carolina and Connecticut College for Women.[3] Around 1941 he and Merton volunteered for a couple of weeks at Catherine Doherty's Friendship House in Harlem.[6] Lax converted from Judaism to Catholicism in 1943, five years after Thomas Merton, and Rice was godfather to both men. But Lax desired a simple life, so he wandered, working in circuses in Canada as a clown and expert juggler. It was travelling with the Cristiani Brothers circus in 1949 that enabled him to generate material for his collection The Circus of the Sun, although that was not published until 1959.

Meanwhile, Lax had helped Rice start Jubilee, a lay Catholic magazine, in 1952 and became its roving editor. In 1953 he was in Paris, writing for a small literary magazine, New Story. By 1962 he found his way to the Greek islands, initially settling in Kalymnos, then moving on to Patmos, where he spent his last years. Seeking relative solitude, Lax said it was important to "put yourself in a place where Grace can flow."[6] The 1962-7 correspondence of Lax and Merton, written in a kind of comic argot, covered his early years in Greece and was first published as A Catch of Anti-Letters in 1978.[7] Later their correspondence over the years 1938–68 was published as When Prophecy Still Had a Voice.[8]

In 1969, Lax received the National Council of the Arts Award. In 1990 he received an honorary doctorate from St. Bonaventure University, a Franciscan institution near Olean, and became its first Reginald A. Lenna Visiting Professor of English, spending three weeks giving readings on campus.[9] The university now houses the main Robert Lax archives. Additional collections of his papers are at Columbia and Georgetown University.

During his final years on Patmos, Lax was the subject of Nicolas Hubert and Werner Penzel's 1999 film Why Should I Buy a Bed When All I Want Is Sleep?[10] He moved back to Olean in 2000, leaving Europe by ship from Southampton, accompanied by his niece and her husband, as he would not travel by air.[11] Shortly after, on 26 September 2000, he died in his sleep at age 84.

Writing edit

Lax wrote hundreds of poems and dozens of books in his long career,[12] but never reached the level of recognition that some of his peers say he deserves. Jack Kerouac, whom he knew in New York, called Lax "one of the great original voices of our times ...a Pilgrim in search of beautiful innocence".[11] Circus of the Sun, a collection of poems metaphorically comparing the circus to Creation, was one of his most acclaimed works. On its publication in 1959, The New York Times hailed it as "perhaps the greatest English-language poem of this century."[13] An excerpt was later distributed to those attending Lax's funeral at St. Bonaventure University on 29 September 29, 2000.

And in the beginning was love. Love made a sphere:
all things grew within it; the sphere then encompassed
beginnings and endings, beginning and end. Love
had a compass whose whirling dance traced out a
sphere of love in the void: in the center thereof
rose a fountain.[14]

Over the years following the composition of Circus of the Sun, Lax's poetry became more and more stripped down to essentials, concentrating on simplicity and making the most out of the fewest components, a technique common to artistic minimalism. Sometimes these pieces consisted of single words, even single syllables, running page after page. As a consequence his work was perceived as sharing the characteristics of Concrete poetry and was included in Stephen Bann’s defining Poetry: An International Anthology (1967) and mentioned in Mary Ellen Solt’s study, Concrete Poetry: A World View (1968).[15] Lax certainly shared an interest in artistic procedures with his friend Ad Reinhardt and reflected that artist's series of black paintings in his own "Homage to Reinhardt":

black/black/black//
blue/blue/blue//
black/black/black/black//
blue/blue/blue[16]

Specialist presses supported such gestures and brought out limited editions, such as the series of hand-written color poems that appeared as silkscreens from Edizioni Francesco Conz.[17] Even words were dispensed with in some of the 1971 publications from Journeyman Press. Mostly Blue consists of graph paper filled in with colored squares,[18] while Another Red Red Blue Poem is composed of thin bars of those colors. In an interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg, Lax later commented on his adoption of minimalist abstraction that "conversations with Reinhardt, and his directions in painting, certainly had an influence on my writing. Sometimes not specifically, but the general direction that he was working in certainly did—towards reducing the number of colours, reducing the form, and repeating the theme."[19]

On another occasion he explained the creation of thin vertical columns of a few numbers or a single capital letter[20] as arising from the wish to adopt the methods of abstract painters, "trying to find what the essence for me of a traditional poem is, and getting it down to that. . . . I wanted to see what it would be. I wanted to do it with the simplest elements."[21] In other instances, Lax used repetition of a few words either as a device for instilling a sense of serenity or to create a sense of surprise in the reader when a change in the pattern occurs. Despite the limited vocabulary of his poems, some create narratives, while others seem more like examples for use in meditative practice or even spiritual discipline. This can be experienced in the tape made of a 1974 performance of Lax's poems given by himself and Robert Wolf in 1974, resembling an uninflected incantation.[22] When Mark Van Doren expressed his doubt about Lax's change in direction, the poet suggested that he might appreciate them more by reading them aloud in this way.[23]

Karen Alexander comments on Lax's 1985 "Dark Earth Bright Sky", in which just those four words are repeated in different permutations: "We could not be more familiar with the simple contrasting elements in this poem, but we often allow the clutter of our lives to obscure our awareness of them. Lax meditates upon them and presents them anew… This is truly essential poetry, poetry with its roots deep in the universal foundation of the human consciousness".[24] And Ryo Yamaguchi, in drawing a parallel between Lax's poetry and the minimalist procedures in the art of Donald Judd and in the music of Philip Glass and Steve Reich, also acknowledges the overlap into spirituality characteristic of the latter two.[25]

Spirituality edit

In the blurb for 33 Poems, William Maxwell, who had worked on The New Yorker with the poet, is quoted as commenting on Lax, "To the best of my knowledge, a saint is simply all the things that he is. If you placed him among the Old Testament figures above the south portal of Chartres, he wouldn't look odd." But although his output embodies a spiritual outlook, Lax was not a doctrinaire writer. He owed as much to eastern as to western systems of spirituality.

For several years, Lax practiced the method of meditation developed by Eknath Easwaran,[26]: 273 [27] and near the end of his life, Lax's only reading each day was from Easwaran.[26]: 272, 281 [28]

Interpretations edit

Lax composed a 35-minute Black/White Oratorio using only nine colour-words and 'and'. This, as it was later arranged by John Beer, was to be performed by a chorus of nine to fifteen people.[29] Since 2014 there have been performances by the Los Angeles-based Readers Chorus.[30]

Between 2011 and 2015 there have also been four visual interpretations of Lax poems by German animator Susanne Wiegner, three of them based on readings by Lax and another interpreting the printed text.[31]

In 2018 Kile Smith composed The Arc in the Sky on nine texts of Robert Lax, described as a 65-minute pilgrimage for unaccompanied choir.[32][33] The following year it was released commercially by Navona Records.[34]

Principal poetical works edit

  • The Circus of the Sun (1959)
  • New Poems (1962)
  • Sea & Sky (1965)
  • 33 Poems (1988)
  • Rooster (1991)
  • A Thing That Is (1997)
  • Circus Days and Nights (2000)

Poems online edit

  • Circus Days and Nights, The Overlook Press 2000
  • Poems (1962–1997), Wave Books 2013
  • A web anthology
  • "5 Poems" 1962–70, Light & Dust
  • "Kalymnos: November 29, 1968", an 11-part poem, Poetry Foundation
  • Red Circle Blue Square, Journeyman Press 1971
  • The Peacemaker's Handbook #1–4, 2001
  • "the port/was longing", Less #2, Edinburgh, Essence Press 2009
  • "Alley Violinist" read by Garrison Keillor

Further reading edit

  • Karen Alexander, "The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax", Interval(le)s – I, 1 (Automne 2004), pp.110–124
  • Sigrid Hauff: A Line in Three Circles. The Inner Biography of Robert Lax & A Comprehensive Catalog of His Works, BoD, Norderstedt, 2007 ISBN 978-3-8334-8480-3
  • Michael N. McGregor: Pure Act: The Uncommon Life of Robert Lax, Oxford University Press, 2017 ISBN 9780823276820

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ ”Robert Lax, Enigmatic Hermit”, Hermitary, 2004]
  2. ^ McGregor 2017, p.10
  3. ^ a b McGregor 2017
  4. ^ Thomas Merton, The Seven Storey Mountain, New York 1998, p.197
  5. ^ The Autobiography of Mark Van Doren, Harcourt Brace, p.212]
  6. ^ a b Whittaker, Richard. "Remembering Robert Lax—A Conversation with Steve Georgiou", Conversations, May 11, 2017
  7. ^ Thomas Merton, Robert Lax, A Catch of Anti-Letters, Rowman & Littlefield, republished 1994]
  8. ^ When Prophecy Still Had a Voice: The Letters of Thomas Merton and Robert Lax, University Press of Kentucky, 2001
  9. ^ "Award-winning teacher, Lax biographer to visit #Bonas to talk about iconic Olean poet", St. Bonaventure University, February 28, 2017
  10. ^ Why Should I Buy a Bed When All I Want Is Sleep? You Tube
  11. ^ a b Hirschfield, Robert. "Robert Lax: A Life slowly Lived", Beshara Magazine, issue 12, 2019
  12. ^ Lax bibliography
  13. ^ Timothy J. Keiderling, "Bard of God’s Circus: in search of Robert Lax", Plough Quarterly #7, Winter 2016
  14. ^ From towards the end of the "Morning" section
  15. ^ Chapter 18, "United States", Ubu Web
  16. ^ Jack Kalmitz,Views, Seawall Press 2012, pp.70–71
  17. ^ Silkscreen on cloth, 1991
  18. ^ A flick-through view at Abe Books
  19. ^ The ABCs of Robert Lax, Stride Publications 1999, p.28
  20. ^ See Alexander 2004, p.118
  21. ^ Speaking Into Silence, Stride, 2001, p.42
  22. ^ A reading from Sea & Sky, Black & White at SoundCloud
  23. ^ Alexander 2004, p.116
  24. ^ Alexander 2017, p.214]
  25. ^ Ryo Yamaguchi, Michigan Quarterly Review,June 2015
  26. ^ a b Harford, James J. (2006). Merton and friends: A joint biography of Thomas Merton, Robert Lax and Edward Rice. New York: Continuum. ISBN 9780826418692. OCLC 69020975. ISBN 0826418694
  27. ^ Harford (2006) quoted Lax as stating that he engaged in "Formal meditation, yes, every day, for a half an hour.... the book I'm trying to follow.... I've been doing it now for three or four years.... It's called Meditation.... Author is Eknath Easwaran.... I've done it now for three years whether I'm traveling on trains or wherever. I do it for half an hour anyway..." (p. 273).
  28. ^ Harford (2006) stated that "In his last year on Patmos, in late 1999 and early 2000.... He [Lax] did no reading except for one quote per day from the Easwaran book" (p. 281).
  29. ^ "David Bellingham Curates Robert Lax", The Hatchery
  30. ^ A 2015 Readers Chorus rendition of Robert Lax's "Black White Oratorio" on SoundCloud
  31. ^ Moving Poems
  32. ^ Smith’s commentary
  33. ^ A choral setting of “Jerusalem” from The Arc in the Sky “Jerusalem” on SoundCloud
  34. ^ Short excerpts

External links edit

  • Robert Lax Archives at St. Bonaventure University
  • Finding aid to Robert Lax papers at Columbia University. Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
  • Robert Lax.com McGregor's website dedicated to Lax
  • Robert Lax at the Poetry Foundation
  • Robert Lax's Contributions to The New Yorker
  • Robert Lax's Obituary

robert, november, 1915, september, 2000, american, poet, known, particular, association, with, trappist, monk, writer, thomas, merton, another, friend, youth, painter, reinhardt, after, long, period, drifting, from, about, world, settled, island, patmos, durin. Robert Lax November 30 1915 September 26 2000 was an American poet known in particular for his association with Trappist monk and writer Thomas Merton Another friend of his youth was the painter Ad Reinhardt After a long period of drifting from job to job about the world Lax settled on the island of Patmos during the latter part of his life Considered by some to be a self exiled hermit he nonetheless welcomed visitors to his home but did nothing to court publicity or expand his literary career or reputation 1 Robert LaxBorn 1915 11 30 November 30 1915Olean New YorkDiedSeptember 26 2000 2000 09 26 aged 84 Olean New YorkNationalityAmericanAlma materColumbia University BA Occupationswriter editor professor Contents 1 Life 2 Writing 3 Spirituality 4 Interpretations 5 Principal poetical works 6 Poems online 7 Further reading 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksLife editLax was born in Olean to Sigmund and Rebecca Lax His father had immigrated to the United States from Austria at the age of sixteen When Robert was in eighth grade the family moved to Elmhurst Queens He first met the future painter Ad Reinhardt at Elmhurst s Newtown High School 2 Lax attended Columbia University in New York City where he studied with the poet and critic Mark Van Doren As a student there in the late 1930s he worked on the college humor magazine Jester with a classmate who became a close lifetime friend Thomas Merton Others on the Jester staff were Ed Rice founder and editor of Jubilee magazine to which all three men contributed in the 1950s and 60s and Ad Reinhardt 3 In his biography The Seven Storey Mountain Merton describes Lax at a meeting with other Jester staff Taller than them all and more serious with a long face like a horse and a great mane of black hair on top of it Bob Lax meditated on some incomprehensible woe 4 Mark Van Doren has commented that The woe I now believe was that Lax could not state his bliss his love of the world and all things all persons in it 5 After graduating in 1938 Lax joined the staff of The New Yorker working his way up from assistant poetry editor he was also poetry editor of Time magazine wrote screenplays in Hollywood and taught at both the University of North Carolina and Connecticut College for Women 3 Around 1941 he and Merton volunteered for a couple of weeks at Catherine Doherty s Friendship House in Harlem 6 Lax converted from Judaism to Catholicism in 1943 five years after Thomas Merton and Rice was godfather to both men But Lax desired a simple life so he wandered working in circuses in Canada as a clown and expert juggler It was travelling with the Cristiani Brothers circus in 1949 that enabled him to generate material for his collection The Circus of the Sun although that was not published until 1959 Meanwhile Lax had helped Rice start Jubilee a lay Catholic magazine in 1952 and became its roving editor In 1953 he was in Paris writing for a small literary magazine New Story By 1962 he found his way to the Greek islands initially settling in Kalymnos then moving on to Patmos where he spent his last years Seeking relative solitude Lax said it was important to put yourself in a place where Grace can flow 6 The 1962 7 correspondence of Lax and Merton written in a kind of comic argot covered his early years in Greece and was first published as A Catch of Anti Letters in 1978 7 Later their correspondence over the years 1938 68 was published as When Prophecy Still Had a Voice 8 In 1969 Lax received the National Council of the Arts Award In 1990 he received an honorary doctorate from St Bonaventure University a Franciscan institution near Olean and became its first Reginald A Lenna Visiting Professor of English spending three weeks giving readings on campus 9 The university now houses the main Robert Lax archives Additional collections of his papers are at Columbia and Georgetown University During his final years on Patmos Lax was the subject of Nicolas Hubert and Werner Penzel s 1999 film Why Should I Buy a Bed When All I Want Is Sleep 10 He moved back to Olean in 2000 leaving Europe by ship from Southampton accompanied by his niece and her husband as he would not travel by air 11 Shortly after on 26 September 2000 he died in his sleep at age 84 Writing editLax wrote hundreds of poems and dozens of books in his long career 12 but never reached the level of recognition that some of his peers say he deserves Jack Kerouac whom he knew in New York called Lax one of the great original voices of our times a Pilgrim in search of beautiful innocence 11 Circus of the Sun a collection of poems metaphorically comparing the circus to Creation was one of his most acclaimed works On its publication in 1959 The New York Times hailed it as perhaps the greatest English language poem of this century 13 An excerpt was later distributed to those attending Lax s funeral at St Bonaventure University on 29 September 29 2000 And in the beginning was love Love made a sphere all things grew within it the sphere then encompassed beginnings and endings beginning and end Love had a compass whose whirling dance traced out a sphere of love in the void in the center thereof rose a fountain 14 Over the years following the composition of Circus of the Sun Lax s poetry became more and more stripped down to essentials concentrating on simplicity and making the most out of the fewest components a technique common to artistic minimalism Sometimes these pieces consisted of single words even single syllables running page after page As a consequence his work was perceived as sharing the characteristics of Concrete poetry and was included in Stephen Bann s defining Poetry An International Anthology 1967 and mentioned in Mary Ellen Solt s study Concrete Poetry A World View 1968 15 Lax certainly shared an interest in artistic procedures with his friend Ad Reinhardt and reflected that artist s series of black paintings in his own Homage to Reinhardt black black black blue blue blue black black black black blue blue blue 16 Specialist presses supported such gestures and brought out limited editions such as the series of hand written color poems that appeared as silkscreens from Edizioni Francesco Conz 17 Even words were dispensed with in some of the 1971 publications from Journeyman Press Mostly Blue consists of graph paper filled in with colored squares 18 while Another Red Red Blue Poem is composed of thin bars of those colors In an interview with Nicholas Zurbrugg Lax later commented on his adoption of minimalist abstraction that conversations with Reinhardt and his directions in painting certainly had an influence on my writing Sometimes not specifically but the general direction that he was working in certainly did towards reducing the number of colours reducing the form and repeating the theme 19 On another occasion he explained the creation of thin vertical columns of a few numbers or a single capital letter 20 as arising from the wish to adopt the methods of abstract painters trying to find what the essence for me of a traditional poem is and getting it down to that I wanted to see what it would be I wanted to do it with the simplest elements 21 In other instances Lax used repetition of a few words either as a device for instilling a sense of serenity or to create a sense of surprise in the reader when a change in the pattern occurs Despite the limited vocabulary of his poems some create narratives while others seem more like examples for use in meditative practice or even spiritual discipline This can be experienced in the tape made of a 1974 performance of Lax s poems given by himself and Robert Wolf in 1974 resembling an uninflected incantation 22 When Mark Van Doren expressed his doubt about Lax s change in direction the poet suggested that he might appreciate them more by reading them aloud in this way 23 Karen Alexander comments on Lax s 1985 Dark Earth Bright Sky in which just those four words are repeated in different permutations We could not be more familiar with the simple contrasting elements in this poem but we often allow the clutter of our lives to obscure our awareness of them Lax meditates upon them and presents them anew This is truly essential poetry poetry with its roots deep in the universal foundation of the human consciousness 24 And Ryo Yamaguchi in drawing a parallel between Lax s poetry and the minimalist procedures in the art of Donald Judd and in the music of Philip Glass and Steve Reich also acknowledges the overlap into spirituality characteristic of the latter two 25 Spirituality editIn the blurb for 33 Poems William Maxwell who had worked on The New Yorker with the poet is quoted as commenting on Lax To the best of my knowledge a saint is simply all the things that he is If you placed him among the Old Testament figures above the south portal of Chartres he wouldn t look odd But although his output embodies a spiritual outlook Lax was not a doctrinaire writer He owed as much to eastern as to western systems of spirituality For several years Lax practiced the method of meditation developed by Eknath Easwaran 26 273 27 and near the end of his life Lax s only reading each day was from Easwaran 26 272 281 28 Interpretations editLax composed a 35 minute Black White Oratorio using only nine colour words and and This as it was later arranged by John Beer was to be performed by a chorus of nine to fifteen people 29 Since 2014 there have been performances by the Los Angeles based Readers Chorus 30 Between 2011 and 2015 there have also been four visual interpretations of Lax poems by German animator Susanne Wiegner three of them based on readings by Lax and another interpreting the printed text 31 In 2018 Kile Smith composed The Arc in the Sky on nine texts of Robert Lax described as a 65 minute pilgrimage for unaccompanied choir 32 33 The following year it was released commercially by Navona Records 34 Principal poetical works editThe Circus of the Sun 1959 New Poems 1962 Sea amp Sky 1965 33 Poems 1988 Rooster 1991 A Thing That Is 1997 Circus Days and Nights 2000 Poems online editCircus Days and Nights The Overlook Press 2000 Poems 1962 1997 Wave Books 2013 A web anthology 5 Poems 1962 70 Light amp Dust Kalymnos November 29 1968 an 11 part poem Poetry Foundation Red Circle Blue Square Journeyman Press 1971 The Peacemaker s Handbook 1 4 2001 the port was longing Less 2 Edinburgh Essence Press 2009 Alley Violinist read by Garrison KeillorFurther reading editKaren Alexander The Abstract Minimalist Poetry of Robert Lax Interval le s I 1 Automne 2004 pp 110 124 Sigrid Hauff A Line in Three Circles The Inner Biography of Robert Lax amp A Comprehensive Catalog of His Works BoD Norderstedt 2007 ISBN 978 3 8334 8480 3 Michael N McGregor Pure Act The Uncommon Life of Robert Lax Oxford University Press 2017 ISBN 9780823276820See also edit nbsp Poetry portalList of American poets HermitsReferences edit Robert Lax Enigmatic Hermit Hermitary 2004 McGregor 2017 p 10 a b McGregor 2017 Thomas Merton The Seven Storey Mountain New York 1998 p 197 The Autobiography of Mark Van Doren Harcourt Brace p 212 a b Whittaker Richard Remembering Robert Lax A Conversation with Steve Georgiou Conversations May 11 2017 Thomas Merton Robert Lax A Catch of Anti Letters Rowman amp Littlefield republished 1994 When Prophecy Still Had a Voice The Letters of Thomas Merton and Robert Lax University Press of Kentucky 2001 Award winning teacher Lax biographer to visit Bonas to talk about iconic Olean poet St Bonaventure University February 28 2017 Why Should I Buy a Bed When All I Want Is Sleep You Tube a b Hirschfield Robert Robert Lax A Life slowly Lived Beshara Magazine issue 12 2019 Lax bibliography Timothy J Keiderling Bard of God s Circus in search of Robert Lax Plough Quarterly 7 Winter 2016 From towards the end of the Morning section Chapter 18 United States Ubu Web Jack Kalmitz Views Seawall Press 2012 pp 70 71 Silkscreen on cloth 1991 A flick through view at Abe Books The ABCs of Robert Lax Stride Publications 1999 p 28 See Alexander 2004 p 118 Speaking Into Silence Stride 2001 p 42 A reading from Sea amp Sky Black amp White at SoundCloud Alexander 2004 p 116 Alexander 2017 p 214 Ryo Yamaguchi Michigan Quarterly Review June 2015 a b Harford James J 2006 Merton and friends A joint biography of Thomas Merton Robert Lax and Edward Rice New York Continuum ISBN 9780826418692 OCLC 69020975 ISBN 0826418694 Harford 2006 quoted Lax as stating that he engaged in Formal meditation yes every day for a half an hour the book I m trying to follow I ve been doing it now for three or four years It s called Meditation Author is Eknath Easwaran I ve done it now for three years whether I m traveling on trains or wherever I do it for half an hour anyway p 273 Harford 2006 stated that In his last year on Patmos in late 1999 and early 2000 He Lax did no reading except for one quote per day from the Easwaran book p 281 David Bellingham Curates Robert Lax The Hatchery A 2015 Readers Chorus rendition of Robert Lax s Black White Oratorio on SoundCloud Moving Poems Smith s commentary A choral setting of Jerusalem from The Arc in the Sky Jerusalem on SoundCloud Short excerptsExternal links editRobert Lax Archives at St Bonaventure University Finding aid to Robert Lax papers at Columbia University Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Robert Lax com McGregor s website dedicated to Lax Robert Lax at the Poetry Foundation Robert Lax s Contributions to The New Yorker Robert Lax s Obituary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Lax amp oldid 1177179511, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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