The list is infinite and heartbreaking, and I have not even added any children's or parents' names to it, not yet.
I'll give you the one paragraph I've written so far.
***
Long after Sylvia Plath extinguished herself in a whirlpool of despair, illness, theater, and vengeance, her husband Ted Hughes tried to describe the ecstatic, suffering anxiety that was a central element of her personality:
Searching for yourself, in the
dark, as you danced,
Floundering a little, crying
softly,
Like somebody searching for
somebody drowning
In dark water,
Listening for them—in panic at
losing
Those listening seconds from your
searching—
Then dancing wilder in the silence.
I think about him, battered relic
of Plath, composing those lines so many years after the fact; still struggling
against her terrible allure, against his own rash and fumbling failures as her
dance partner. The powers-that-be, it seems, saw fit to inflict him with a lifetime
spent facing the music—though he hobbled onward, grievously damaged yet
wielding his vocation to the end. If not sustenance, poetry was at least a few
scant drops of water in the wasteland.
2 comments:
I think you could do a marvelous job with this topic, which, I imagine, could easily evolve into a book or portraits in poetry. Go for it!
This might be of interest to you:
http://www.wordandfilm.com/2012/10/poetic-injustice-the-five-most-fascinating-poet-biopics-never-made/
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