Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Ted Hughes statuette in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England

A statue of poet Ted Hughes is in Barnsley where he used to live. The sculptor has included elements from the poets' life and poems.

You can follow the links back from national newspapers to local newspapers for details.

What do I remember of the poet? At school reading a rather nasty poem about a pike. Learning that he had had two wives or girlfriends who committed suicide. (Wife Sylvia Plath. I used to confuse her with Stevie Smith who wrote the poem about not waving but drowning.) The two facts about the vicious pike poem the and wife's suicide together rather put me off Ted Hughes poetry when I was at a younger and more sensitive age.I wasn't the only one. Or I was influenced by the others. The whole story is rather grim. After he left Sylvia she committed suicide. The women he left her for, Assia Gutmann Wevill also committed suicide. Eventually, so did Hughes' and Plath's son Nicholas.

Looking for negatives, I find the quotation from Ted Hughes: Nobody wanted your strange glitter, your floundering life and your efforts to save yourself.

In his defence it should be said that Sylvia had been suicidal before she met him. Their daughter has written in defence of her parents.

But then as soon as you discuss figures from the past, people you have not met, memory shuffles them altogether in a drawer.

I tend to feel the whilst somebody is alive to support them and their work is channeling money and attention and adulation (admiration and praise, worship) in their direction. I steer clear or being hurt by their actions, or by approving their actions.

Yet, what if you love their earlier work? What if you have been a fan for years? What do you feel about Woody Allen and Roman Polanski? What if their next of kin hate them? Or support them?

Does their work reflect their lifestyle and beliefs? Or is it totally separate? Does their work lead you into following their lifestyle? What about Wagner? What about Woody Allen's humorous comment on Wagner that whenever Woody hears Wagner he feels like invading Poland? That's a comment on Woody Allen, and a comment on Wagner.

However, after an artist has died, it is too late to have any influence on them. Their descendants are not to blame for anything and indeed may be victims.

Many artists, and indeed famous and successful people of any sort,  have private lives, or public works, which some people find distasteful. Take nude statues and paintings. Impressionists. Lady Caroline Lamb described Byron as: Mad, bad and dangerous to know.

Mad is mostly a matter of opinion. Except for those who were in mental asylums. Several cases of those exist. Van Gogh had what I instinctively and succinctly think of and describe as his 'ear trouble'. Was Sylvia more mad than her husband Ted Hughes? Does one have to take sides?

As for literature, Victorian era bowdlerised Shakespeare. Chaucer was bawdy. D H Lawrence was banned.

Activities go in and out of fashion. Even the leaders of great cultures, such as the Greeks and Romans, and major religions, have been accused of all kinds of immorality.

So now I am prepared to take another look at Ted Hughes' poetry, and admire the statue.

I'll be checking facts I half remember for accuracy or at least a source closer to the poet and other than myself and posting more later.I want to check his poems and find an out of copyright picture of the poet and the statue. Even if I have to wait six months until I have a chance to photograph the statue myself. In the old days I used to go back and update blog posts. Now that I have so many, and so much to say, I feel it would be more appropriate to give a link from one to another written at a later date.

Wikipedia neatly sums up his success and the controversy.

Edward James "TedHughesOM (17 August 1930 – 28 October 1998) was an English poet and children's writer. Critics routinely rank him as one of the best poets of his generation.[1] He served as Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death.
Hughes was married to American poet Sylvia Plath from 1956 until her suicide in 1963 at the age of 30.[2] His part in the relationship became controversial to some feminists and some American admirers of Plath. His last poetic work, Birthday Letters(1998), explored their complex relationship. These poems make reference to Plath's suicide, but none addresses directly the circumstances of her death. A poem discovered in October 2010, Last letter, describes what happened during the three days before her death.[3]
In 2008 The Times ranked Hughes fourth on their list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".[4]

http://www.barnsley-chronicle.co.uk/news/article/11267/sculptor-unveils-memorial-for-poet
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Ted Hughes
by Angela Lansbury


The poet's statue stand and stares

He's gone and lost, with no more care
But left behind his leaping mind
But left us all steel words to share


From writer's block to solid rock

The poet, reader, sculptor find
All gain profit of a different kind
His ripe thoughts rippling everywhere


The weak and strong, the right and wrong

The endless fight, the day and night
Flowing but tight, both dressed and bare
As we gaze at his statue there


Too late to correct or condemn

We must just save, see good, in men.

Copyright Angela Lansbury Nov 24 2015.
If you wish to quote me, please quote up to but no more than four lines and refer the reader back to my post with a link. Thank you. For commercial use of the poem, please contact the author in writing.

In case you had not noticed, my poem follows a sonnet form of three four line verses ending with a couplet.

The writer's block is the block of stone which makes the sculpture, as well as the writer's hesitation before starting to write. Steel is also a pun on steal. Profit is financial and spiritual.

Flowing but tight can mean the construction of a poem. Dressed and bare, the statue or the thoughts. Correct and condemn applies to both the poet's actions in life and his verse. Men refers to both mankind and the tendency of men to dominate women and be the fighters.

Barnsley
Barnsley is in South Yorkshire. If you drive north from London and use Barnsley as a stopover, in addition to the Ted Hughes statue, you might also visit the town hall, a listed building containing a museum.The area is also known for the Bard of Barnsley, glass making, the former coal mining, brass bands, and the sign of the the Stork shop, which said it stocked everything except the baby.

Quotes from Ted Hughes
Nobody wants your ...
... the words look after themselves, like magic.

TED HUGHES MEMORIALS & PLACES TO VISIT
1  Westminster Abbey, London, England
Poets Corner. Stone.

2 White Bear Inn, Barnsley
The 16 inch maquette or model Ted Hughes is at The White Bear in the town centre and includes a pike, fox and crow.
The sculptor is local man, Graham Ibbeson.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnsley
http://www.barnsley-chronicle.co.uk/news/article/11234/woman-who-ran-famous-shop-dies
http://www.wearinns.co.uk/our-pubs/51/The-White-Bear-Barnsley-South-Yorkshire
http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Restaurant_Review-g528795-d4106647-Reviews-The_White_Bear_Pub-Barnsley_South_Yorkshire_England.html

3 Mexborough, Yorkshire (15 miles from Sheffield)
Birthplace of Ted Hughes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexborough (Lists Ted Hughes)

4 Gravestone of Sylvia Plath, Heptonstal, Yorkshire
Photo of grave in Wikiquote.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Plath
http://www.thetedhughessociety.org

In the USA Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath were in Massachusetts.

Made in Mexborough: Ted Hughes's South Yorkshire by Steve Ely.

Angela Lansbury, travel writer and photographer.

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