Poetry
and grief are no strangers; one can find expressions of grief in poetic form going
back to Homer and Virgil, Beowulf and
Dante. Tennyson wrote the book-length poem In
Memoriam A.H.H. over the course of 17 years to express his grief at the
death of his friend, Arthur Hallam.
Two
recent collections by Chelsea Rathburn and Kristina Marie Darling both deal
with grief, but is a grief different from that over physical death. These poems
are expressions of grief at the end of relationships.
Chelsea
Rathburn even puts “grief” in her collection’s title, A Raft of Grief. And she notes the
double meaning of “raft” – both as a symbol of surviving as well as signifying
a large amount. The poems address the end of relationships (or perhaps the
singular “relationship”) or departures, what happens immediately after, and new
beginnings.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
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