Galleon of Dream explained

Galleon of Dream
Author:Lin Carter
Illustrator:Lin Carter
Cover Artist:Lin Carter
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:poetry
Publisher:The Sign of the Centaur
Release Date:1953
Media Type:Print
Pages:24
Oclc:52064669
Preceded By:Sandalwood and Jade
Followed By:A Letter to Judith

Galleon of Dream: Poems of Fantasy and Wonder is a poetry collection written and illustrated by Lin Carter. The book was released in paperback by The Sign of the Centaur in 1953. in a limited edition of 200 copies.[1] The book is dedicated to Doris Margaret Derrick, "friend and teacher."[1]

Background

Carter intended the book as a companion to his earlier verse collection Sandalwood and Jade, which, like it, contained lyrical verses of a "fantastic nature." Disclaiming innovation in his poetry, and disdaining "the confusing, uneven and unreadable verse-forms in which modern poetry is torturing its public," he lists his inspirations as Percy Bysshe Shelley, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, John Masefield, Lord Byron, the anonymous author of The Song of Solomon and the pseudonymous author of The Kasidah of Hadji Abdu el Yezdi, Edmund Spenser, Bilhana, George Sterling, Lilith Lorraine, Rudyard Kipling, and Robert Louis Stevenson.[2]

Summary

The collection consists of thirty poems, lavishly illustrated, together with a foreword by the author.

Contents

External link

Notes and References

  1. Carter, Lin. Galleon of Dream: Poems of Fantasy and Wonder, 1953, p. 4.
  2. Carter, Lin. Galleon of Dream: Poems of Fantasy and Wonder, 1953, p. 2.