Edmund Wilson wrote that Robert Lowell was 'the only recent American poet -- if you don't count Eliot -- who writes successfully in the language and cadence and rhyme of the resounding English tradition.' Randall Jarrell observed of him, 'You feel before reading any new poem of his the uneasy expectation of perhaps encountering a masterpiece.' He was the English-speaking world's preeminent postwar poet. Frank Bidart and David Gewanter have compiled the definitive edition of Lowell's work, from his first, impossible-to-find collection, Land of Unlikeness; to the early triumph of Lord Weary's Castle, winner of the 1946 Pulitzer Prize; to the brilliant willfulness of his versions of poems by Sappho, Baudelaire, Rilke, Montale, and other masters in Imitations; to the late spontaneity of The Dolphin, winner of another Pulitzer Prize; to his last, most searching book, Day by Day. This volume also includes poems and translations never previously collected, and a selection of drafts that