For the Union Dead
Farrar, Straus & Giroux | |
Publication date | 1964 |
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For the Union Dead is a book of poems by
Notable poems from the collection include "Beyond the Alps'" (a revised version of the poem that originally appeared in Lowell's book Life Studies), "Water," "The Old Flame," "The Public Garden" and the title poem, which is one of Lowell's best-known poems.
Style and subject
The poems from For the Union Dead built upon the more personal, looser style that Lowell had established in Life Studies. For instance, some of the poems are written in free verse or with a loose meter, and some contain irregular rhymes or no rhymes at all.
However, although many of the poems in this volume are personal, their subject matter is different from Life Studies since there aren't any poems that focus on the subject of Lowell's mental illness. Instead, the more personal poems here focus on Lowell's close family relationships, centering on individuals like his daughter ("Child's Song"), his cousin Harriet Winslow ("Soft Wood"), his father ("Middle Age"), and his ex-wife ("The Old Flame"). However, since these poems don't involve taboo subject matter, they aren't notably "confessional" (as some of the poems in Life Studies were). The closest that Lowell comes to addressing his mental illness is in the poem "Eye and Tooth" when, in the final line, he writes, "I am tired. Everyone's tired of my turmoil."[1]
Other notable subjects in these poems include Lowell's childhood ("Those Before Us" and "The Neo-Classical Urn"), and he also writes a number of poems about famous historical figures like Caligula (in "Caligula") and Jonathan Edwards (in "Jonathan Edwards in Western Massachusetts")--so multiple subjects of world history are explored in this book (although historical subjects would later become the main focus of his book History, published a few years later).
In comparison with Life Studies, Lowell stated, "For the Union Dead is more mixed [with different kinds of poems] and the poems are separate entities. I'm after invention rather than memory, and I'd like to achieve some music and elegance and splendor, but not in any programmatic sense. Some of the poems may be close to symbolism."[2]
"For the Union Dead" (poem)
Lowell originally wrote the poem "For the Union Dead" for the Boston Arts Festival in 1960 where he first read it in public.[3] The title refers to the 1928 poem "Ode to the Confederate Dead", by Lowell's former teacher and mentor Allen Tate. At the 1960 festival, Lowell said, "Writing is neither transport nor a technique. My own owes everything to a few of our poets who have tried to write directly about what mattered to them, and yet to keep faith with their calling's tricky, specialized, unpopular possibilities for good workmanship. When I finished Life Studies, I was left hanging on a question mark. I don't know whether it is a deathrope or a lifeline."[4]
The setting of "For the Union Dead" is the
The final lines of the poem, which read, "The Aquarium is gone. Everywhere,/ giant finned cars nose forward like fish;/ a savage servility/ slides by on grease" are particularly well known for their rather dark description of the large American cars that were popular at the time, evoking a corrupted consumer society without heroism.
"The Public Garden"
"The Public Garden" is a revised version of the poem "David and Bathsheba in the Public Garden" which was originally published in Lowell's third book
Response
The public reception of For the Union Dead was generally positive.
In The New York Times, G. S. Fraser wrote that, "the book seems to me the most powerful and direct volume of poems [Lowell] has yet published".[7] In Time magazine, a book review stated, "Lowell is the poet par excellence of the particular . . . [and] the poetry [in For The Union Dead] lives—images linger in the mind, the thing described is seen with stunning clarity". However, Time criticized Lowell for his poetry's "occasional obscurity".[8]
External links
References
- ^ Lowell, Robert. "Eye and Tooth." For the Union Dead. Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 1964. 22.
- ^ Kunitz, Stanley. "Talk with Robert Lowell. The New York Times. 4 October 1964. [1]
- ^ "Modern American Poetry".
- ^ Stanley Kunitz's NY Times Article on Lowell
- ^ Website on South Boston Aquarium Archived 2015-12-18 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Lowell, Robert and John Berryman. Guggenheim Poetry Reading. New York: Academy of American Poets Archive, 1963. 88 minutes.
- ^ Fraser, G. S., "Amid the Horror, A Song of Praise" The New York Times, October 4, 1964.
- ^ "Poet of the Particular" Time, October 16, 1964.