From the beginning I was drawn equally to those two primary streams of early modern poetry, which I tend to think of as the Styx and the Spoon. I cannot remember quite when or where I was when I encountered either of them for the first time. The earliest memory of the Styx, river of death, dream and forgetfulness, was in some old book [...]
Archive for the ‘symbolism’ Category
1. the two rivers: the Styx and the Spoon
Posted in Arthur Rackham, beauty, blank verse narratives, Edgar Lee Masters, Edwin Arlington Robinson, faery lore, farming, graveyards, John Keats, naturalism, River Styx, rivers, Robert Frost, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, shadows, sonnet, Spoon River, symbolism, Thomas Hardy, unconscious, Walter Crane, William Blake, William Wordsworth, tagged blank verse narratives, Edgar Lee Masters, graveyards, River Styx, sonnet, Spoon River, symbolism on May 31, 2008 | 1 Comment »
12. Submerged in the waters of Lethe
Posted in absinthe, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Art Institute of Chicago, beauty, Catherine, Dante, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Elizabeth Siddal, Emily Bronte, gothic, graveyards, Heathcliff, John Keats, Lethe, love lost, moor, oblivion, opiates, poppies, poverty, Pre-Raphaelites, shadows, symbolism, Victorians, Virginia DeCourcey, tagged graveyards, Heathcliff, symbolism, Virginia DeCourcy on May 18, 2008 | 1 Comment »
Sleep, dream, opiates, oblivion. Years in which I read Keats above all others, culminating finally in a visit to his home on the edge of Hampstead Heath. A life surrounded by dark colors, drawn curtains, bottles of cabernet and candlelight. Solitary hours in a moonlit garden, midnight excursions to graveyards, daylong pilgrimages to the Symbolist [...]









