Anthology
Posted by Eckhart's Dog Woof! Woof! on February 19, 2010
I’m in the process of compiling an anthology of poems, essentially to give to my children as an introduction to poetry, and through poetry to wider concerns in philosophy, history, theology, science, etc. A lot of my own education is anchored by poetry. You start with a poem, or a poet’s body of work, and travel outwards in expanding rings of interpretation. It’s a good way to learn, and helps maintain focus. For copyright reasons, however, I cannot always post the particular poem that I would like to append to each ‘blurb’. So I’ll just name it. If you’re interested, you can go look it up.
Plath:

Poppies in October
Plath is a cult figure. She was married to Ted Hughes, who she met at Cambridge University. They married in 1956, and seperated in 1962. Plath committed suicide in 1963. She had suffered from depressive episodes most of her adult life. Her one novel, The Bell Jar, is a record of an earlier suicide attempt, and of her subsequent treatment, that pre-dated her Fullbright Scholarship to Cambridge. A lot of her later poems are records of extreme states of mind, and one or two raise moral and aesthetic issues in their choice of subject matter. She rather infamously made reference to the Holocaust, or Shoah, in a reverse-telescope sort of way: not to contextualise her own suffering or to treat of the Holocaust from a wider cultural and historical perspective, but as metaphor and imagery for her own subjective states. This has led Seamus Heaney, for example, to assess her as a definitive poet, but not a great one. She was certainly a poetic genius, her use of language is driven by a sense of rythmn that generates chains of metaphor and imagery and allusion, a spectacle that unfolds in front of you without hidden, background preparation. In that way she is a naked writer. Very quickly on reading her work, you sense it’s origin, usually in a psychic disturbance. The distance it travels from conception in the poet’s mind to completion and autonomy on the page is very short, so you gain a sense of incipience and unfolding which is very infectious, and which leaves you with the sensation that you know her privately, which is one of the reasons, no doubt,for her achieving cult status. I read her very closely for a few years. I think of her as sort of a distant Aunt. Poppies in October records the kind of surprise that many of her poems must have induced within herself, when they arrived so sudden, as given.
(Poppies in October)
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