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and Poetry
Poetry Review:
Birthday Letters by Ted Hughes, Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1998,
198 pages, $20.00
Memories of Sylvia Plath
By Margaret Rees
28 May 1998
Birthday Letters --the book of poems recently released
by Ted Hughes--returns to the field of a long standing literary
controversy and with the assurance of emotion-laden memory, demonstrates
that poetry has still untapped potential to find a broad audience.
The poems treat the six-year marriage between Hughes and American
poet Syliva Plath before her suicide in 1963, when she left bread
and milk for her two sleeping children and then gassed herself.
For years, Hughes has remained silent in the face of those who
judged and found him wanting for having walked out on Plath and
their children a few months before her death.
While he and Plath were both poets, they emerged from different
traditions, his English and hers American. Having shaken the dust
of America from her feet, and living an uneasy existence as an
expatriate writer in England, Plath developed a dazzling literary
momentum. Central to her reputation are the Ariel poems
written prior to her death, in which she plunged into a horrific
psychic abyss.
Now Hughes answers some of her poetry, measure for measure--and
there is an element of rivalry with her stature as a poet, as
though it has haunted him a long time. Fellow poet Seamus Heaney
wrote in his recent review that Hughes until now "was impaled
on the horns of a creative dilemma: to write directly about that
which most desperately craved expression could seem like an exploitation
of something sacrosanct, but not to write about it must have felt
like an abdication of spiritual and imaginative responsibility."
Birthday Letters has the feel of cauterizing a long
festering wound, a release of tension, of breaking free. The poems
harbor many strong emotions--regret, anger, pain and self-pity.
Hughes recounts episodes from their life together in bitter, jarring
and sometimes crude images. The recurring theme throughout the
book is Plath in her coffin. In all but two of the poems, he is
addressing her directly, and by following the chronology of their
marriage, builds up dramatic intensity as Plath nears her suicide.
The couple first met at Cambridge when she was a Fulbright
scholar in 1956. Although his memories of their early love affair
are overlaid with portents of disaster, he recaptures the exhilaration
she evoked for him in 18 Rugby St:
You were a new world. My new world.
So this is America, I marvelled.
Beautiful, beautiful America!
There is also the nostalgia of an old man with a shade of resentment
towards a young woman, or perhaps it is a hint of envy about the
world she came from, compared with an exhausted old world. In
Your Paris, I thought was American, Hughes recalls that
her Paris was nothing like his, although they went there together
on their honeymoon. He accuses her of literary tourism, while
My perspectives were veiled by what rose
Like methane from the reopened
Mass grave of Verdun.
In many poems Hughes intimates that it was conventional expectations
of herself that trapped Plath and destroyed her. Their marriage
and his poetic influence gave her a new direction and purpose
in her fight to become a writer. When they both travelled to the
US, he acted as a counterweight to her fear of breaking away from
conventional expectations of success. He had a strong distrust
of university respectability and was convinced that any tenured
academic job would suffocate them. Plath later wrote to her brother:
"I see too well the security and prestige of academic life,
but it is Death to writing."
In a poem entitled The Blue Flannel Suit, he satirizes
Plath as she prepared to go back and work as a lecturer in English
at her alma mater--Smith College for women--sitting nervously
at breakfast on the first day in an ugly tailored suit she had
specially made, in keeping with the idea she had of what was expected
of her.
He abruptly pulls himself short, and remembers the fate that
awaited her. His image, "That blue suit, A mad, execution
uniform, Survived your sentence" is reminiscent of Plath's
Daddy poem in which she imagined herself as a Holocaust
victim.
Ugly reality showed him what to shun, but could not show him
where to go. Plath agreed to return to England with him: "The
speed and expense of America is just about 50 years ahead of me,"
she wrote. When she was pregnant with their first child, the couple
moved to London.
In the poem Epiphany about the birth of their daughter,
Hughes recounts his own pride as he went for a walk afterwards
in the London streets, and met a man trying to sell a fox cub.
His decision not to buy it, he ascribes to his fear of a challenge
and desire for respectability. With this decision, he announces
he knew their marriage had failed.
Hughes has the sea as a constant metaphor for Plath's unhappiness,
her loss, her homesickness, her search for freedom. In The
Beach he writes:
You craved like oxygen
American early summers, yourself burnt dark
Some prophecy mislaid, somehow. England
was so poor!
In answering one of her poems, in which she identified with
a hunted animal, he writes more prosaically in The Rabbit Catcher
about her anger that prompted the identification:
You raged against our English private greed
Of fencing off all coastal approaches
Hiding the sea from roads, from all inland.
You despised England's grubby edges when you got there.
When he left her, an event mentioned only obliquely, she was
trapped, alone with two small children, and unable to retrace
her steps to the United States.
The Birthday Letters have provoked a great deal of interest,
serving as they do as an answer to the controversy that has surrounded
Hughes, while he continued to edit and release Plath's writings
and pursued his own literary career.
Particularly after the re-release of her novel The Bell
Jar in 1971, feminists claimed Plath as an icon and the more
extreme hounded Hughes as morally responsible for her death. Their
grotesque actions included repeatedly defacing her grave and protest
chants at Hughes' poetry readings overseas.
The refreshing quality about his book is the complete absence
of any sense of remorse or guilt.
In much of Hughes' earlier writing, when his themes are mystical,
steeped in fatalism and superstition, paying court to the conception
that mankind is completely subordinate to the forces of nature,
the effect is almost tongue in cheek and although the imagery
is often blood-drenched, as in the Crow anthology, curiously
bloodless.
In a 1960s introduction to The New Poetry A. Alvarez
described the disease that bedeviled English culture as the urge
to "gentility", and hoped that the new poets he included
would be able to avoid this danger.
In a similar vein W.H. Auden wrote: "One comes across
passages, even in very fine English poets, which make one think:
'Yes, very effective, but does he believe what he is saying?':
in American poetry such passages are extremely rare."
Whether Plath wrote about nature, or about the social restrictions
on individuals, she stripped away the polite veneer. She let her
writing express elemental forces and primeval fears. In doing
so she laid bare the contradictions that tore apart appearance
and hinted at some of the tensions hovering just beneath the surface
of the American way of life in the post war period.
Hughes wrote in an introduction to her short stories: "All
are circling the flames which the poetry, encouraged by 'Johnny
Panic' and 'The Bell Jar', eventually jumped into."
In her Ariel poems she approached death from every possible
angle: longing for oblivion in Tulips; suicide as an art
form to be perfected in Lady Lazarus; as a nameless, formless,
murderous intent in Elm; personified as the corpse of her
next door Devon neighbour in Berck Plage; herself as the
prey in Death and Co and her offer to be a willing sacrificial
victim in Birthday Present. In one of her last poems, Edge,
she calmly observes the form of a dead woman:
The illusion of a Greek necessity
Flows in the scrolls of her toga,
Her bare
Feet seem to be saying:
We have come so far, it is over.
Her letters home, written at the same time, struggling to maintain
an identity of common sense optimism, serve as a bizarre counterpoint
to the searing brutality of the poems, where she precisely surveyed
her own growing fascination with death and recorded her own self-immolation.
Ironically, in the midst of the torment, she was aware that
her artistic name was assured. This conviction is the unifying
element between the letters affirming her great love of her children
and describing her efforts to find a future with them and the
terrifying journey into darkness that was charted in her poetry.
In a 1962 essay she had written: "I am not worried that
poems reach relatively few people. As it is, they go surprisingly
far--among strangers, around the world, even. Farther than the
words of a classroom teacher or the prescriptions of a doctor;
if they are very lucky, farther than a lifetime."
That she was unselfconscious about her aspiration to be a poet
was an expression of her vitality. On her grave there is the inscription:
"Even amid fierce flames the golden lotus can be planted."
That Plath's life ended when she was only thirty years old says
something about the stifling, claustrophobic existence she faced
as an artist and the unconducive atmosphere for the disturbing
insights of a poet.
Now Hughes has taken the threads of their life together and
rewoven his deep seated memories and obsessions in a work that
carries a marked assurance of the weight and bearing of what he
has to say.
In this dialogue with his dead wife, he may owe a poetic debt
to her vigor. Birthday Letters is a work that will create
fresh interest in the writings of both Hughes and Plath.
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