If
you asked who my favorite poet is, I wouldn’t hesitate in my answer: T.S. Eliot. If you asked me my favorite poem
or collection of poems, my answer would not be “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” or “The
Hollow Men” or “Four Quartets.” My answer would be Spoon River Anthology
by Edgar Lee Masters (1868-1950).
I
first read Spoon River Anthology in high school, junior year, in fact,
the year we all took American literature (paired with American history). Our
teacher, Mrs. Prince, was a larger-than-life character who spoke in breathless
superlatives and occasional exuberant shouts. She told us that Jacqueline
Susann’s Valley of the Dolls
was the greatest American novel ever written; it had been published the
previous year.
She
loved American literature, however, and she was rather wildly enthusiastic
about Huckleberry Finn
(apparently is was almost as good as Valley of the Dolls) and Walt
Whitman. But when she introduced us to the Realists (Edith
Wharton, Jack London, Willa
Cather) and the early Modernist poets (Eliot, Vachel Lindsay, Sara Teasdale, and others), I believe I fell
in love with literature.
We
read parts of Spoon River Anthology, that collection of more than 200
tombstone inscriptions, aloud in class. I read the whole work for a research
paper. I was enthralled. The class even attended a production of Thornton
Wilder’s Our Town, which
seemed to me a dramatic version of Spoon River Anthology.
To continue
reading, please see my post today at TweetspeakPoetry.
Top Photograph: Edgar Lee Masters
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