Dawn Potter
Kenyon’s husband, Donald Hall, who watched her die of leukemia, later spoke of how he and his wife had learned to exist together. “Each member of a couple is separate,” he said; “the two come together in double attention. Lovemaking is not a third thing but two-in-one. John Keats can be a third thing, or the Boston Symphony Orchestra, or Dutch interiors, or Monopoly. For many couples, children are a third thing.” For these two poets, poetry was naturally a third thing, but of necessity it could not be the only one.
[The complete essay appears in the winter 2016 issue of the Sewanee Review]
2 comments:
I going to test the value of my public libraries subscription base before asking you for this essay "offline." I thought Donald Hall's memoir on his life with Jane Kenyon was a fascinating piece of writing. I was glad you used part of it in one of your books. Alas, I forget now which one.
Lucy, this essay should be available on JSTOR, which I'm sure you have access to.
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