[New-Poetry] Carol Ann Duffy gets the laurels

Uche Ogbuji uche at ogbuji.net
Sat May 2 17:37:29 EDT 2009


You know, on the other hand, it occurs to me that the most famous Poet
Laureate, Tennyson, was the most pathetic of the pathetically
fallacious, so maybe that's what they look for in the post.

--Uche

Uche Ogbuji wrote:
> maryann wrote:
>> Hello, new member here. We're amassing a fair collection of links to
>> some of her poems and articles about her over here:
>>
>> http://www.ablemuse.com/erato/showthread.php?t=7440
>>
>> My introduction to her was her sonnet "Prayer," which is widely
>> anthologized. I figured it hadn't been mentioned here because everybody
>> knew it, but in case I'm wrong, here's a link:
>>
>> http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/987.html
>>
>> The sonnet appeals to me much more than the sly and amusing pieces that
>> are being quoted in the recent articles.
> 
> Hmmm.  Yuck.  Some people think John Ruskin's "pathetic fallacy" is any
> random anthropomorphic trope, but they're wrong.  There is nothing wrong
> with anthropomorphic trope in general.  The problem is when a
> characterization of an inanimate object is meant to carry the *entire*
> metaphorical force of the expression.  *That* is what Ruskin rightly
> ridiculed, and *that* is how this sonnet offends in spades:
> 
> ... and stare
> at the minims sung by a tree, a sudden gift.
> 
> ... hearing his youth
> in the distant Latin chanting of a train.
> 
> Those are the most sophomoric bits to me, and it made it hard for me to
> appreciate anything else in the poem.
> 
> 


-- 
Uche Ogbuji                       http://uche.ogbuji.net
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