05/08/2020
//: A collection of poems deals with the politics, history, and ravages of uprising in the author's homeland.
Review
A strong and vibrant work, particularly in these tragic times. -- John Ashbery
After The August Wedding In Lahore, Pakistan
At The Museum
The City Of Daughters: A Poem About Kashmir
The Correspondent
The Country Without A Post Office
Death Row
Farewell
A Fate's Brief Memoir
First Day Of Spring
The Floating Post Office
A Footnote To History
Ghazal (3)
Ghazal (4)
Ghazal (5)
Hans Christian Ostro
A History Of Paisley
I Dream I Am The Only Passenger On Flight 423 To Srinagar
I See Kashmir From New Delhi At Midnight
The Last Saffron
Lo, A Tint Cashmere! Lo, A Rose!
Muharram In Srinagar, 1992
A Pastoral
Return To Harmony 3
Some Vision Of The World Cashmere
Son Et Lumiere At Shalimar Garden
A Villanelle
-- Table of Poems from
Agha Shahid Ali's Kashmir, in his poems, is our own lost but inalienable homeland. . . . But the grace and wit, the perceptions and illuminations they serve, their accent, are his own. -- W. S. Merwin
Combining humane elegance and moral passion, Ali speaks for Kashmir in a large, generous, compassionate, powerful and urgent voice. . . . Few poets in this country have such a voice or such a topic. -- Hayden Carruth
Extraordinary formal precision and virtuosity. . . . This is poetry whose appeal is universal, its voice unerringly eloquent. A marvelous achievement. -- Edward Said
The Country without a Post Office