Swenson, May - Richard Howard (essay date 1966)
Richard Howard (essay date 1966)
SOURCE: "May Swenson," in Tri-Quarterly, No. 7, Fall, 1966, pp. 119-31.
[Howard is an American poet, critic, and translator who won a Pulitzer Prize in 1970 for his poetry collection Untitled Subjects (1969). In the following essay, he traces the poetic style evinced in Swenson's verse, finding it magical and incantatory.]
A harsh assessment of Swenson:
May Swenson begins and ends in mannerism. She is forever tinkering, taking apart a cat, a watch, a poem. Without evident embarrassment she can tell us (in "The Watch") that the watchmaker "… leaned like an ogre over my / naked watch. With critical pincers he / poked and stirred. He / lifted out little private things with a magnet too tiny for me / to watch almost. 'Watch out!' I / almost said …" I'm not just sure what kind of good fun this is. She is endlessly feeling things and relentlessly fashionable about...
[The entire page is 3925 words long]
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Criticism
- John Berryman (essay date 1956)
- Nat Hentoff (essay date 1958)
- Winfield Townley Scott (essay date 1959)
- Barbara Gibbs (essay date 1959)
- Anthony Hecht (essay date 1963)
- X. J. Kennedy (essay date 1964)
- Richard Howard (essay date 1966)
- May Swenson (essay date 1966)
- Peter Davison (essay date 1968)
- Ann Stanford (essay date 1969)
- Nancy Sullvian (essay date 1971)
- Alicia Ostriker (essay date 1978)
- Michael Heller (essay date 1988)
- Michael Collier (essay date 1991)
- Edward Hirsch (essay date 1992)
- Alfred Corn (essay date 1993)
- Sue Russell (essay date 1994)
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- Langdon Hammer (essay date 1995)
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