Editor: Sarah Jane Barnett
Ever since reading "Pandora" the poem has stayed with me. I thought it would make an interesting Tuesday Poem as it's quite unusual. For me, I can't think of another poem that has managed to create such a feeling of genuine repulsion and disgust.
In "Pandora" my repulsion comes not only from the man who abuses the dog, but from the other man who runs from the scene. The line "as his stonepath ceased to mess itself under me" and its allusion to soiling oneself, seems to capture the speaker's cowardly nature. The poem also works against the traditional lyric form and transformational moment, which I applaud. It certainly made me think about the purpose of poetry, and I still shudder with every reading.
This week's editor Sarah Jane Barnett is a writer and reviewer who lives in Wellington. Her first collection of poems, A Man Runs into a Woman, was published by Hue & Cry Press in 2012. She blogs at theredroom.org.
After you're enjoyed the poem here at the hub, do check out the Tuesday Poets in the sidebar - each has selected a poem by themselves or another poet.
5 comments:
Wow! That's certainly a powerful and disturbing poem. Almost funny, but too awful really to be funny. I've liked everything of Rhydian Thomas' I've read.
It's certainly high on the revulsion stakes, but beautifully constructed. A kind of 'shudder' read! Thanks for posting something so different. It's good to be shaken occasionally!
Creepy and memorable. The repetition of that huh-huh works really well. So does so much of the language -- the offbalance, the speaking softly in a titan's voice... and of course the name. AS Janis and Kathleen said -- good to be shaken by poetry sometimes.
This is disturbing and yet also so very compelling —
I think there should be two punches to go with the cleaver ending. Hardly a coward, just realistic.
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