Wednesday, January 22, 2020
Edward James Hughes :: essays research papers fc
 Edward James Hughes      Edward James Hughes is one of the most outstanding living British poets. In 1984  he was awarded the title of the nation's Poet Laureate. He came into prominence  in the late fifties and early sixties, having earned a reputation of a prolific,  original and skilful poet, which he maintained to the present day. Ted Hughes  was born in 1930 in Yorkshire into a family of a carpenter. After graduating  from Grammar School he went up to Cambridge to study English, but later changed  to Archaeology and Anthropology. At Cambridge he met Sylvia Plath, whom he  married in 1956. His first collection of poems Hawk in the Rain was published in  1957. The same year he made his first records of reading of some Yeats's poems  and one of his own for BBC Third Programme. Shortly afterwards, the couple went  to live to America and stayed there until 1959. His next collection of poems  Lupercal (1960) was followed by two books for children Meet My Folks (1961) and  Earth Owl (1963). Selected Poems, with Thom Gunn (a poet whose work is  frequently associated with Hughes's as marking a new turn in English verse), was  published in 1962. Then Hughes stopped writing almost completely for nearly  three years following Sylvia Plath's death in 1963 (the couple had separated  earlier), but thereafter he published prolifically, often in collaboration with  photographers and illustrators. The volumes of poetry that succeeded Selected  Poems include Wodwo (1967), Crow (1970), Season Songs (1974), Gaudete (1977),  Cave Birds (1978), Remains of Elmet (1979) and Moortown (1979). At first the  recognition came from overseas, as his Hawk in the Rain (1957) was selected New  York's Poetry Book Society's Autumn Choice and later the poet was awarded  Nathaniel Hawthorn's Prize for Lupercal (1960). Soon he became well-known and  admired in Britain. On 19 December 1984 Ted Hughes became Poet Laureate, in  succession to the late John Betjeman. Hughes has written a great deal for the  theatre, both for adults and for children. He has also published many essays on  his favourite poets and edited selections from the work of Keith Douglas and  Emily Dickinson (1968). Since 1965 he has been a co-editor of the magazine  Modern Poetry in Translation in London. He is still an active critic and poet,  his new poems appearing almost weekly (9:17)    Judging from bibliography, Ted Hughes has received a lot of attention from  scholars and literary critics both in the USA and Britain. However, most of  these works are not available in Lithuania. Hence my overview of Hughes'  criticism might not be full enough.  					    
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