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2006 Australian poetry collection by Robert Adamson

The Goldfinches of Baghdad is a collection of poems by Australian poet Robert Adamson, published by Flood Editions in USA in 2006.[1]

The collection contains 53 poems from a variety of sources.[2]

  • “A Bend in the Euphrates”
  • “A Visitation”
  • “The Greenshank”
  • “Whitling Kites”
  • “Easter Fish”
  • “The Voyage”
  • “Walking by the River”
  • “Eurydice and the Mudlark”
  • “The Floating Head”
  • “Eurydice Agape”
  • “The Serpent”
  • “Eurydice and the Tawny Frogmouth”
  • “Singing His Head Off”
  • “Eurydice after a Midnight Storm”
  • “Letter to Eurydice”
  • “Eurydice Combs Her Hair”
  • “Eurydice on Fire”
  • “Eurydice Reads ‘Roots and Branches'”
  • “Eurydice in Sydney”
  • “Thinking of Eurydice at Midnight”
  • “Symbolism”
  • “Gang Gang Cockatoos”
  • “Eclectus Parrot”
  • “Major Mitchell’s Pink Cockatoo”
  • “Red Necked Avocet”
  • “The Ruff”
  • “Rainbow Bee-Eaters”
  • “The Ravens : After Trakl”
  • “The Peach-Faced Finches of Madagascar”
  • “The Dollarbird”
  • “The Cow Bird”
  • “The Grey Whistler”
  • “The Flag-Tailed Bird of Paradise”
  • “The Goldfinches of Baghdad”
  • “Fishing in a Landscape for Love”
  • “Brahminy Kite”
  • “The First Chance Was the Last Chance”
  • “Powder Hulk Bay”
  • “Winter Night”
  • “Elegy from Balmoral Beach”
  • “Memory Walks”
  • “On Not Seeing Paul Cezanne”
  • “Eventail : For Mery in Paris”
  • “Elizabeth Bishop in Tasmania”
  • “Letter to Robert Creeley”
  • “Letter to Tom Raworth”
  • “The Flow Through”
  • “Not a Penny Sonnets”
  • “The Apostlebird”
  • “David Aspden’s Red Theme”
  • “David Aspden’s Yellow Tree”
  • “Flannel Flowers for Juno”
  • “Reaching Light”
  • “Brahminy Kite”
  • “Gang Gang Cockatoos”

Writing in Australian Book Review Jaya Savige was impressed with the “shape” of this collection, noting: “As the culmination of forty years’ experience, it is nothing short of a masterpiece.” He continued: “As a collection, it is sublimely cohesive: from first to last, the correspondences between poems are considerably fecund. Less a series of songs than an organically realised symphony, the volume is replete with a masterful lyricism and a comprehensive, mythopoeic grandeur verging on an indigenous ‘dreaming’.”[3]

In The Weekend Australian reviewer Barry Hill called the collection “a marvel in several ways.” He went on: “Some poems gesture, nostalgically, towards mortality, as well as ambivalently towards an earlier bohemian life; others allude to dislocations and possible reconciliations in matters of love; there is, too, a set of conceits about failures of utterance, a feeling belied by the poems themselves. But all of this is done with a deftness that avoids the reductive tedium of the merely biographical.”[4]

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