[New-Poetry] Hughes missives
Anny Ballardini
anny.ballardini at tin.it
Mon Oct 22 03:20:41 EDT 2007
It is quite logical to pity Plath, but I probably pity Ted Hughes more.
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From: jforjames at aol.com
To: new-poetry at wiz.cath.vt.edu
Sent: Monday, October 22, 2007 12:08 AM
Subject: [New-Poetry] Hughes missives
From The Sunday TimesOctober 21, 2007
Letters of Ted Hughes edited by Christopher ReidReviewed by John Carey
Ted Hughes generated more scandal than any English poet except Byron. But the power of these letters does not depend on their revelations about his private life. It issues from the radiant aliveness of his language and imagination. Mundane subjects whirl into comic fantasy – the potatoes in his vegetable patch “rumbling in the earth like contented elephant herds”, his peas “wandering the neighbourhood and assaulting the local beauties”. Animals and birds are endlessly reinvented – swifts zipping into their nests “like bullets into earth”, a stray hedgehog “snivelling and snuffling his heart out”, a cat washing itself “until its wrists look sore”. Write in your own way, he told Sylvia Plath, “and make it stand up off the page and jump about the room”.
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