Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Note on Referencing and Abbreviations
- Chronology
- Introduction
- 1 The problem of biography
- 2 The debates about Hughes
- 3 Hughes and animals
- 4 Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath
- 5 The anthropologist’s uses of myth
- 6 Hughes’s social ecology
- 7 Hughes and feminism
- 8 Hughes and the classics
- 9 Hughes as prose writer
- 10 Hughes on Shakespeare
- 11 Class, war and the Laureateship
- 12 Hughes and his critics
- Guide to further reading
- Index
10 - Hughes on Shakespeare
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Note on Referencing and Abbreviations
- Chronology
- Introduction
- 1 The problem of biography
- 2 The debates about Hughes
- 3 Hughes and animals
- 4 Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath
- 5 The anthropologist’s uses of myth
- 6 Hughes’s social ecology
- 7 Hughes and feminism
- 8 Hughes and the classics
- 9 Hughes as prose writer
- 10 Hughes on Shakespeare
- 11 Class, war and the Laureateship
- 12 Hughes and his critics
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
Oscar Wilde remarked that criticism is the only civilized form of autobiography, while Virginia Woolf believed that all Shakespearean criticism is as much about the critic’s self as the dramatist’s plays. Shakespeare is a mirror in which serious readers and spectators see sharpened images of themselves and their own worlds.
Shakespeare was the absolute centre of Ted Hughes’s sense of the English literary tradition. The plays were a major influence on his own poetry, in terms of both linguistic intensity and thematic preoccupation. The world of Hughes’s verse is one in which, as Macbeth puts it, ‘light thickens, and the crow / Makes wing to the rooky wood’. More than any other poet, Shakespeare assaulted Hughes — one of the great literary readers of the twentieth century — with the shock of the as-if-new. An unpublished journal entry dated 22 January 1998 begins ‘The idea of flamingoes. Of clam-dippers. Read with amazement: “Mine eye hath played the painter and hath stell’d” as if I’d never seen it before’. This is what Hughes did throughout his life: read Shakespeare with amazement, as if he had never read him before. The key to Shakespearean acting is to speak each line as if it were being spoken for the first time, as if it were new minted from the thought-chamber of the character who utters it.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Ted Hughes , pp. 135 - 149Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011