Ted Hughes Essays

  • The Successful Career of Ted Hughes

    673 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ted Hughes is a very successful author. There are many things that would allow you to come to this conclusion. Throughout his life, many things happened which helped contribute to his workings. Throughout his career he showed imagery, characterization, mystery, and irony techniques in his books and poems. The life of Ted Hughes contributed to many of his works. He is often referred to as one of greatest English authors in the twentieth century. He was born on August 17th, 1930 in Yorkshire. His

  • Love Song and September by Ted Hughes

    903 Words  | 2 Pages

    quote from Ted Hughes. Ted Hughes was a man of love. Hughes was known for many of his children books and famous poems. Hughes is also greatly known for holding the title of British Poet Laureate from 1984 until his death. Love was an important aspect of Ted Hughes life and two poems: Love Song and September. Ted Hughes was born August 17, 1930 in Yorkshire, England. His parents were Edith Hughes and William Henry. His father was a carpenter. Hughes had two siblings Owlyn and Gerald Hughes.5 At the

  • Ted Hughes: The Shadow of Sylvia Plath

    2307 Words  | 5 Pages

    recipient of both the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry and T.S. Eliot’s prize for poetry, Ted Hughes was an acclaimed poet. The shadow of Hughes late wife, Sylvia Plath, kept Hughes stagnant in his career, in which he was known as “Her Husband” (Middlebrook). Hughes most recent collection of poems, Birthday Letters, took him over twenty-five years to write, and contains poems which recount the marriage of the couple. Hughes wrote the poems as a loving gesture towards Sylvia, but the poems were misinterpreted

  • Ted Hughes' 'The Jaguar'

    2425 Words  | 5 Pages

    Ted Hughes' 'The Jaguar' How effectively does Hughes convey the power of the jaguar? Ted Hughes’ poem ‘The Jaguar’ describes the animals in a zoo and their lifestyles. It also compares them to the jaguar, which is an animal that lives differently to the others in the way that it views its life. The poem depicts the jaguar as powerful, but in what way? The first line of Ted Hughes’ poem the jaguar is: “The apes yawn and adore their fleas in the sun.” From the very first three words it is

  • An Assessment of C.K. Wiliams and Ted Hughes

    2010 Words  | 5 Pages

    Readers can identify with this, as we all know that grief is not an appare... ... middle of paper ... ... Hughes writes, “… to announce to the world / What Life had made of you” (112). Hughes feels happy at this moment, but he knows that Plath’s happiness is too good to be true, and that it probably won’t last. We all know that it couldn’t, and it didn’t. Both Williams and Hughes present life in a manner that may not be pleasant, but is nonetheless true-to-life. Although Williams’ life-view

  • The Violent Energy of Ted Hughes

    1178 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Violent Energy of Ted Hughes "Poetic voice of blood and guts" (Welsh 1) said one newspaper headline announcing the appointment of Ted Hughes as the new Poet Laureate in November of 1984. It was fairly typical of the surprise with which the media greeted this appointment because Ted Hughes, it seems, is for most people a difficult poet. Hughes is frequently accused of writing poetry which is unnecessarily rough and violent when he is simply being a typically blunt Yorkshireman, describing

  • Ted Hughes’ Ideas about Poetry

    627 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ted Hughes’ Ideas about Poetry Ted Hughes, was born in 1939 and died in 1989, he wrote two poems, The Jaguar and The Thought-Fox. These are the poems that I am discussing in my essay and also what his ideas are on the poems. He also specialises in nature poems and these are what we have also been studying. The Thought-Fox is quite a different poem. It wasn’t written about the fox it was written about him writing about the fox (confusing I Know!!!). The Jaguar on the other hand, was about

  • The poems of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes Tell the Story of Unendurable Lives

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    The poems of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes tell the story of the lives that have become unendurable. In the 1950’s women were expected to behave in a certain ways. The poems written by both Plath and Hughes revels the effects of the ideology domesticity 1950’s Britain, on how women were expected to act. Plath’s marriage was a very stressful ‘on the edge’ relationship. The poem ‘The applicant’ reflects how much women were viewed as objects. One quotation supporting this is ‘do you wear, A glass

  • Ted Hughes' Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow

    2526 Words  | 6 Pages

    Social Issues and Creation Stories in Ted Hughes' Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow There are many mythological stories that exist in this age.  Within these different myths, there are many answers to how our world was created.  Yet, one must become open-minded to other myths that do not necessarily discuss creation; Crow: From the Life and Songs of the Crow can be seen to fall into this category.  This collection of Ted Hughes' poetry is intertwined with social issues and creation

  • Comparing the way two poets, John Claire and Ted Hughes, write about

    1644 Words  | 4 Pages

    Comparing the way two poets, John Claire and Ted Hughes, write about the theme of nature and the season of summer. Through out my essay, in which is to follow, I will be comparing the way two poets, John Claire and Ted Hughes, write about the theme of nature and the season of summer. The two poems that I am to study are Work And Play written by Ted Hughes and Summer Images written by John Claire in the 1800's. In both the poems the poets are talking directly to us (the reader). Although

  • Hawk Roosting Aniela Baseley 13 FO The poem is written by poet Ted Hughes. In his life time Hughes has published many poems about nature and animals.

    690 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hawk Roosting Aniela Baseley 13 FO The poem is written by poet Ted Hughes. In his life time Hughes has published many poems about nature and animals. The poem is written by poet Ted Hughes. In his life time Hughes has published many poems about nature and animals. The poem has six stanzas, all written in the first person, with no discernable rhyming scheme. The poem represents a hawk, as it roosts on a tree top, watching over the world and contemplating life. This hawk sees itself, as the centre

  • Pike Ted Hughes

    1264 Words  | 3 Pages

    Pike Ted Hughes Choose a poem you studied recently which challenges the reader to view something familiar in a new and thought provoking way. Pike Ted Hughes Stanzas one to four of the poem are there to describe the Pike, its nature, what it looks like and it’s destiny in nature as a predator. The poet, Ted Hughes, in writing this poem challenges the reader to view nature in a totally new perspective by exploring the power and violence in it by using one animal in river life, the

  • A Comparison Of The Poetry Of Edward James Hughes

    1588 Words  | 4 Pages

    are raised to be aggressive. One poet who recognized this tragic flaw in humanity was Edward James Hughes, an eccentric man who lived in the twentieth century. Edward, known as Ted, was considered one of the most successful poets of the 1900s. He wrote fictional poems and children's books. He is well known for his contributions of nature influenced poems containing inner meanings and lessons. Hughes lived in England and the United States where he taught at the University of Massachusetts. Five of

  • Ted Hughes’s Pike versus Sylvia Plath’s Mirror

    2026 Words  | 5 Pages

    ” Plath’s “Mirror” Abstract: Sylvia Plath’s 1961 poem “Mirror” can be read as a rejoinder to Ted Hughes’s 1958 poem “Pike.” Plath shrinks her husband’s mythic grandeur to reveal a psychodrama of the self as a vanishing façade. Sylvia Plath’s 1961 poem "Mirror" builds up to the appearance of a terrible fish, an internalized counterpart of the watching consciousness under the dark pond of Ted Hughes's 1958 poem "Pike." Whereas Hughes's poem evokes the spirit of the place and the genetic

  • Rebecca Birthday Letters Analysis

    1964 Words  | 4 Pages

    with the narrator, the very fact that Ted Hughes produced ‘Birthday letters’ 35 years after Sylvia’s death displays that he can neither move on and is still tormented and troubled by her death. Almost every poem in ‘Birthday Letters’ is addressed directly to Plath, after so many years he still has clear memories of events and experiences that he shared with

  • Pink Wool Knicted Dress, By Langston Hughes

    1310 Words  | 3 Pages

    due to Hughes, as a modern figure, writing about his own personal experiences; his bitter sadness is bound up with the bright side of love and positivity that has come in the wake of their relationship. ‘Pink Wool Knitted Dress’ references this happiness, as he recalls Sylvia “you sobbed with joy”. The use of the word ‘pink’ in the title is deliberate, denoting femininity, innocence, and happiness, things that are all destroyed eventually. There is contrasting motivation to write this text compared

  • "Sylvia Plath- Feminine Side of the Feminist Icon"

    1583 Words  | 4 Pages

    Sylvia Plath was a typical example of her generation, inpatient and greedy for life but this description has a bit different meaning. Plath indeed desired artistic fulfilment but she wanted to be an ideal wife and mother at the same time. When Ted Hughes published his first poetry volume "The Hawk in the Rain" she was very happy that she will follow his footsteps. Throughout their marriage she was in the shadow of her husband and we can argue whether it was her conscious choice and to what extend

  • Sylvia Plath Confessional Poetry Analysis

    821 Words  | 2 Pages

    getting the proper treatment at a mental health facility, she went back to school to finish her degree in 1955. “Plath herself had suffered a serious breakdown and attempted suicide between her junior and senior years in college”(Baym). She met Ted Hughes, who she married in 1956, at Cambridge University in England.

  • Distraught and Haunted Poet

    854 Words  | 2 Pages

    (1932-1963)." Benet's Reader's Encyclopedia of American Literature. George B. Perkins, Barbara Perkins, and Phillip Leininger. Vol. 1. New York: HarperCollins, 1991. 850. Literature Resource Center. Web. 22 Apr. 2014. Middlebrook, Diane Wood. Her Husband: Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath--a Marriage. New York: Penguin, 2004. Print. Freedman, William (1993): “The Monster in Plath’s ‘Mirror.’” Papers on Language and Literature, 108.5: 152-69.

  • Sylvia Plath: A Novelist and her Brief Life

    703 Words  | 2 Pages

    was not what she expected it would be. Plath was more of a personal assistant than an actual writer. This realization was a sad reality to her because her goal was to be a write... ... middle of paper ... ...d changing the tomb to say Plath. Hughes was then criticized even more when his new wife, his mistress, killed herself and their children the same way Plath did six years later. Plath’s works were known for their extremely feminist and suicidal themes. Plath wrote about whatever came to