William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) is most influential figure in the development of American poetry in the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. His simple language and focus on the
familiar objects and voices of everyday life pulled poetry out of the past and restored its ability to express contemporary experience. Williams believed passionately in poetry's usefulness,
abhorring its perception as an esoteric pursuit and insisting on the impact it could have on the life of a reader if only made relevant to his or her experience. Examining the sources of this
belief, Ian Copestake breaks new ground by tracing the enduring impact of Williams's youthful experience of Unitarianism on his poetry. Williams's Unitarianism was a historical connection with
Emerson: this study argues that he is a poet in an Emersonian tradition. Two chapters focus on Williams's long poem Paterson, arguing that its long gestation -- from 1927 to 1951 -- reflects
its role as an autobiography in progress. Paterson came more and more to reflect the poet's struggle to uphold the values he committed himself to when he decided to become a poet. Copestake
investigates sources that point to the ethical heart of Williams's poetry and to his lifelong belief that "It is difficult / to get the news from poems / yet men die miserably every day / for
lack / of what is found there." Ian D. Copestake is a Lecturer at the Universit瓣t of Bamberg, Germany and President of the William Carlos Williams Society.