I'm not a long poem devoté.  I like parts of Paterson, but don't ask me to defend the coherence of the entire structure.  I prefer other parts of Hart Crane's opus to The Bridge.  The Cantos is the work of Pound I'm least interested in.  
Similarly, with Henry Gould, I tend to appreciate him in small pieces, rather than caring very much about the macro level of his ambitious projects.  The poem beginning with the line  "It takes about a year for earth to breathe,"  for example, is exquisite.  The sounds and the mood evoked are quite spectacular.  I think I even understand what it is about:  midwinter spring is its own season and all that.  It's not exactly easy poetry, but I wish it would receive a wider hearing.  If Nobel laureate Derek Walcott is a tad over-rated, in my opinion, then Gould must be under-rated by a far greater margin, since I find him to be as good a writer of verse (if not better) as Mr. Walcott.  It's a style that might take a while to warm up to, but I do think it offers its eccentric pleasures to anyone patient enough to stick with it a while.    
                  
 
 
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