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From a very young age Levertov was influenced by her religion, and when she began writing it was a major theme in her poetry.
Through her father she was exposed to both Judaism and Christianity.
Levertov always believed that her culture and her family roots had inherent value to herself and her writing.
Furthermore, she believed that she and her sister had a destiny pertaining to this. When Levertov moved to the United States, she fell under the influence of the Black Mountain Poets, especially the mysticism of Charles Olson.
She drew on the experimentation of Ezra Pound and the style of William Carlos Williams, but was also exposed to the Transcendentalism of Thoreau and Emerson.
Although all these factors shaped her poetry, her conversion to Christianity in 1984 was the main influence on her religious writing.
Sometime shortly after her move to Seattle in 1989, she became a Roman Catholic.
In 1997, she brought together 38 poems from seven of her earlier volumes in The Stream & the Sapphire, a collection intended, as Levertov explains in the foreword to the collection, to " trace my slow movement from agnosticism to Christian faith, a movement incorporating much doubt and questioning as well as affirmation.

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