ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 ‘SYMBOLISM’ IN TED HUGHES’ POETRY Dr. S.B. Radhika Bai. Post Doctoral Fellow Dept. of English. S.V. University, Tirupati. A.P. ‘Symbolism’ is a technique used in literature profound when some things are not to be taken symbolism, therefore, gives universality to literally. The symbolism can be an object, the characters and the themes of a piece of person, situation, events or actions that have literature. Symbolism in literature evokes a deeper meaning in context. Symbolism is interest often used by writers to enhance their opportunity to get an insight of the writer’s writing and give insight to the reader. mind on how he views the world and how he Symbolism can give a literary work more thinks of common objects and actions, richness and colour and can make the having broader implications. meaning of the work deeper. than in the readers literal as one. they find The an In symbolism, ideas are presented Symbolism can take different forms. obliquely through a variety of symbols. The Generally, it is an object representing poet awakes, in the readers, a response or a another to give it an entirely different reaction beyond the levels of ordinary meaning that is much deeper and more consciousness. significant. Sometimes, however, an action, The Symbolist poets are convinced an event or a word spoken by someone may that the transient objective world is not a have a symbolic value. For instance, “smile” true reality but a reflection of the invisible is a symbol of friendship. Similarly, the absolute. action of someone smiling at you may stand defied realism and naturalism, which are as a symbol of the feeling of affection which aimed at capturing the transient. They do not that person has for you. define or describe emotions or ideas directly Symbolism gives a writer freedom to It is on this account that they through explicit metaphors and similes but add double levels of meanings to his work : by A literal one that is self-evident and the symbols used through metaphors, similes, symbolic one whose meaning is far more suggesting implicitly. Images and personification, hyperboles and other figures 1 ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 of speech are potent tools in the hands of a British literature.’ The same poet's poetry is poet to convey his meaning and message. termed ‘a dismaying badness,’ ‘a raw-sexviolence imagery.’ All this is in bitter Edward James "Ted" Hughes, (17 condemnation which is evident from his August 1930 – 28 October 1998) was an uncompromising, obsessive preoccupation English poet and children's writer. Critics with beasts, birds, plants, insects, landscapes routinely rank him as one of the best poets and other wild living- beings in the natural of his generation. Hughes was British Poet world, which finds a permanent place in all Laureate from 1984 until his death. Hughes his voluminous anthologies of poems. was married to American poet Sylvia Plath, Hughes’s lengthy career included from 1956 until her suicide in 1963 at the over a dozen books of poetry, translations, age of 30. His part in the relationship non-fiction and children’s books, such as the became controversial to some feminists and famous The Iron Man (1968). His books of (particularly) American admirers of Plath. poems His last poetic work, Birthday Letters Flowers and Insects (1986), Selected Poems (1998), explored their complex relationship. 1957–1981 (1982), Moortown (1980), Cave These poems make reference to Plath's Birds (1979), Crow (1971), and Lupercal suicide, but none of them addresses directly (1960). His final collection, The Birthday the circumstances of her death. A poem Letters (1998), published the year of his discovered in October 2010, Last letter, death, documented his relationship with describes what happened during the three Sylvia Plath. include: Wolfwatching (1990), days leading up to Plath's suicide. In 2008 Hughes’s work is marked by a The Times ranked Hughes fourth on their list mythical framework, using the lyric and of “The 50 greatest British writers since dramatic monologue to illustrate the intense 1945”. subject matter. Animals appear frequently Ted Hughes, a poet laureate is called throughout his work as deity, metaphor, a ‘Zoo laureate,’ ‘an animal poet,’ ‘a poet of persona, and an icon. Perhaps the most blood and guts,’ ‘a terror’s ambassador,’ ‘a famous of his subjects is “Crow," an Heath cliff,’ and ‘an incredible hulk of amalgam of god, bird and man, whose 2 ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 existence seems pivotal to the knowledge of perhaps innumerable further senses.” (3). good and evil. Drawing the analogy between his inspiration His creation of a modern bestiary and a function performed in primitive through the study of numerous animals and cultures, Sagar says that Hughes is a bard in the harsh landscape of western riding, have the traditional sense and a shaman of given individuality and originality to his primitive cultures. poetry. He has introduced a new poetic The Ted Hughes’ poetic conception is style, characterized by wrenched syntax and that modern man's spiritual and cultural scansion, of failure is brought about by the schism or the vocabulary and image. Hughes’ work shows duality between his outer rational conscious a variety of themes and experimentation self and the inner irrational subconscious with language. self. Modern poet cannot present this extraordinary yoking In the words of Terry Gifford and Neil Roberts, universal theme in simple, direct narrative He is a poet who has developed – mode. Ted Hughes had before him the role from an early reliance on external Nature to model of T.S. Eliot, who for elucidating a a greater metaphysical assurance and the similar theme in The Waste Land took the creation of a distinctive imaginative world. grail legend of Miss Weston's Ritual to (Ted Hughes : A Critical Study, 11). For Romance as his basic symbol. Hughes’ too Keith Sagar, Ted Hughes is “a great poet in a similar attempt, found animals, birds because of and other non human and non rational imagination which issues in the purest creatures to be potent symbols for his poetry, charged poetry, visionary, revelatory subject. These creatures enable him to form poetry that sees into the life of things, that his attitude to Nature and his interpretation takes over where all other modes of of man's relationship with it symbolically. apprehending reality falter.” (The Art of Ted In that way symbolism imparted not only Hughes, his grandeur and dignity, but also depth and imagination, the critic Keith Sagar suggests profundity to his imagery. It also enhanced that it is rooted in his “unconscious, on the our level of understanding of the poem’s racial unconscious, on his sixth sense and meaning. It is to achieve this poetic function he 3). possesses the Commenting kind on 3 ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 that Hughes made use of striking symbols in them certain qualities which associate and images everywhere in his poetry. He them with human beings. He weaves great brought into play a few predatory animals philosophy and birds like hawks, pikes, jaguars, ghost- inferences about human behaviour by crabs thrushes, skylarks to serve his studying them. Hawk, for the poet is a symbolic purpose. symbol of malevolent predatory nature. It is around them and draws The Imagery in animal poems has its the poet's spokesman for interpreting nature. own appeal. It shows Hughes enormous It is the embodiment of evil ‘otherness’. It powers of observations and an exceptional symbolizes a relentless struggle against all capacity to embody these observations in apt odds that oppose its survival. It represents words. The description of animals and birds the ‘white goddess’ the female principle and is graphic and realistic. The Language used is the embodiment of all that is grandeur in to show his striking originality and felicity nature. It is a contrast and anti- thesis to of expression. He sought to match the man's rationality and puniness. violence of the subject with a language of ‘Jaguar’ is a potent symbol for violence. He summons into service, dense illustrating the poet's theme. What the ‘tiger’ and rough vocabulary and oddly combined is for Blake, is ‘Jaguar’ for Hughes. It serves words to form striking phrases. His heavy him as a mystical and visionary symbol. It is and muscular words slap at the face of the an evocation of a beautiful nature spirit and readers with the strength of his jaguar. The embodiment of primal animal energy that is vitality, violence and ferocity of the wild suppressed and controlled by the rational beasts and birds are forcefully brought in attitude of modern man. The caged animal striking word pictures. symbolizes the predatory, ferocity, rage, The Images employed by Ted blindness and deafness in human nature. Hughes are not there just to record his visual Hughes’ makes frequent use of imagery and impressions of the animals but they have a symbols to create a sense of living power symbolic significance. He does not consider which, even at his most nihilistic, produces a the animals merely as four-legged ones and note of urgency and command. (Elemental the birds as two-winged creatures. He finds Energy: The Poetry of Ted Hughes, 107). 4 ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 Ghost crabs and pikes symbolize the coming out of it suddenly. Here the abstract presence of dark, irrational forces at the idea is given a concrete shape. Without a edge of man's awareness. The crabs appear direct statement of the theme Hughes to be specialized machines for stalking, proceeds to present it obliquely in symbolic fastening, mounting and tearing the victims words and phrases in the first line to the last apart. with a string of images. Hughes’ animals - hawks, jaguars The phrase ‘mid night moments and macaws represent the fierce nature forest’ in the very first line refers to the while the fox symbolizes the cunning and lonely and solitary environment needed to cut-throat competition in men. They also compose a poem. The line ‘something else is represent the heroic endurance and fortitude alive’ alludes to the thought in the poet’s at the hours of crisis, which deserve mind that struggles to come out. The next emulation by men. Their aggressive and lines suggest the thoughts moving restlessly oppressive nature of these animals may in the poet's brain for expression like a fox reflect and wandering in the midnight dark forest in imperialistic traits of the British nation to search of its hiding hole. The final stanza which Hughes himself belongs. Hughes presents the climax when inspiration comes animals, birds and fish may be conceived as at last and abstract thought takes a concrete the aesthetic shapes and sources of life to shape a written expression, the war like belligerent Till, with a sudden sharp hot stink of fox It enters the dark hole of the combat the sterility of the poetic lines. They serve him as the poetic masks to reach the head. world of the spirit and reality. The window is starless still; “The Thought-Fox” is one of the the clock ticks, The page is printed. (‘The Hughes' best known animal poems. It is Thought-Fox’). about a poet sitting with pen and paper Here ‘the dark hole of the head’ is a waiting for the much-needed inspiration to write a poem. compressed This simple theme is metaphor, comparing the thought to a fox and the fox hole to the presented as a thought taking shape in the poet’s brain. ‘The page is filled,’ suggests poet’s head like a fox entering a forest and 5 ELK Asia Pacific Journals – Special Issue ISBN: 978-81-930411-1-6 [4] P.R. King, “Elemental Energy : The Poetry of Ted Hughes.” Nine Contemporary Poets. London: Methuen, 1979. Print. that inspiration to write the poem has come and the poem is written on paper. Symbolically inspiration stands for instinct and it replaces intellect in the poet's self. [5] Ted Hughes., The Hawk in the Rain. London: Faber, 1957. Print. Hughes' use of language also contributed to the total effect of the poem. The mimetic rhythm seeks to stimulate the action of the poem. It evokes the movement of a fox which is as cunning and eluding as that of the poet's thoughts. Thus, Ted Hughes’ symbols and images are spontaneously drawn from a wide variety of sources; yet the subtlety of his sole purport of self-analysis and selfexpiation through suffering unites them all. There is an inevitability about his obsessive squaring up to the problem of modern man’s self-alienation from nature and the consequent spiritual torpor. References [1] M.H. Abrams, A Glossary of Literary Terms. New Delhi : Cengage, 2011. Print. [2] Terry Gifford and Neil Roberts, Ted Hughes: A Critical Study. London: Faber and Faber, 1980. Print. [3] Keith Sagar, The Art of Ted Hughes. London: Cambridge University Press, 1975. Print. 6
© Copyright 2025 Paperzz