About Time: A Modernist Coda for Thomas
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 June 2021
Summary
When Ned Allen asked me to contribute a piece to this collection of critical chapters on Dylan Thomas, my reflex to say ‘yes’ was checked almost immediately by the recognition that I had no critical context for doing so. I write ‘almost immediately’ because my first response was a surge of affirming interest at the chance. And that is the double measure I want to unpack and formulate here – as a frame not just on the thoughts I am offering in this piece, but on the use and value of the collection for which it will serve as a coda.
My ‘yes’ came from a history and memory, from a personal depth of connection to this verse that I take to be representative of many others’. This is a poetry we read, and reread, and sang silently or whisperingly to ourselves in those years of middle or late adolescence when we were beginning to get some understanding feel for what poetry is, or can be, and can do. Involuntarily or inadvertently, I was memorising the poems of Dylan Thomas; gradually but inevitably, I had metabolised the poems of Dylan Thomas. The reasons why this could happen involve the strengths of a poetry that turn out to be limitations – not necessarily the limitations of the poems as poems, but of ourselves as readers, that is, of our propensity to put them into certain systems of critical translation, interpretive understanding. One of those systems, unwittingly undergone but then wittily (we would say) named, was ‘hormonal poetics’: here was a poetry opening up like the chemical experience of puberty – the intense but confusing sensorium of rhythm and image, a music of meaning as compelling but indeterminate as the urges of the unknown we were undergoing at the cellular level, impulses now turned outward into pulses in the physical body of language and displaced ultimately into the cultural bloodstream in the lyrics of the musician who traded Zimmerman for Dylan as his surname. In this spot of time – in physical as well as political history – the tremendously affective power of Dylan Thomas seems to be concentrated and intensified. And, most importantly, limited: so that, in the instant between the automatic ‘yes’ and the considered ‘but wait’ of my responses to the editor's invitation, I moved into that constricted vision of Thomas that had been prepared for me.
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- Information
- Reading Dylan Thomas , pp. 233 - 240Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2018