Ted Hughes has published several volumes of verse and his poems have a singular approach because of the themes they explore, as well as, the manner in which they explore them. The poets before Hughes were thoroughly consumed with the harrowing backwash of the Second World War and their poetry reflected the macabre front of a stony world where the question of human existence and the absurdity of life were the engrossing concerns. Hughes was a revolutionary poet in the sense that he revolted against this post-war tendency of being evasive to the harsh realities of the times. He painted bare the nightmarish world and emotional stagnation that the Great War had resulted into. Another distinctive feature of Hughes’ poetry is that he is a ca...
Ted Hughes (1930-1998) began his career as a poet with the publication of The Hawk in the Rain in 19...
Ted Hughes’s animal poetry seems, at first, to oscillate back and forward between two poles: creatur...
"And again now, and now, and now"-these words come from Ted Hughes's poem "The Thought-Fox". I begin...
The entire body of Ted Hughes’s poetry has enjoyed and is still enjoying a wide readership for the b...
Ted Hughes in his essay “Poetry in the Making” states that poems are a “mysterious they” which prese...
“Until one has loved an animal a part of one’s soul remains unawakened.” Anatole France Edward James...
Animal imagery is an important element in the poetry of Ted Hughes. These images, catalogued in this...
Ted Hughes is one of the most representative poets in contemporary Britain. He is named as the “anim...
The existence of nature-themed in a literary work is not only used as a setting, but also as a criti...
Abstract: This paper discusses the significance of Ted Hughes’s animal poems, and find out the rela...
This thesis explores Ted Hughes’s poetry between the 1950s and 1980s, focusing on an emergent eco-po...
Abstract Ted Hughes's poetry hints at modern man's self-division and subsequent alienation...
In his verbal still-lifes, Ted Hughes reverses the traditional dynamics of scopophilia by putting th...
In this essay, my primary aim is of course to provide a picture of Hughes’s description of the image...
<p>Ted Hughes is one of the major nature poets in English Literature. However, he is different from ...
Ted Hughes (1930-1998) began his career as a poet with the publication of The Hawk in the Rain in 19...
Ted Hughes’s animal poetry seems, at first, to oscillate back and forward between two poles: creatur...
"And again now, and now, and now"-these words come from Ted Hughes's poem "The Thought-Fox". I begin...
The entire body of Ted Hughes’s poetry has enjoyed and is still enjoying a wide readership for the b...
Ted Hughes in his essay “Poetry in the Making” states that poems are a “mysterious they” which prese...
“Until one has loved an animal a part of one’s soul remains unawakened.” Anatole France Edward James...
Animal imagery is an important element in the poetry of Ted Hughes. These images, catalogued in this...
Ted Hughes is one of the most representative poets in contemporary Britain. He is named as the “anim...
The existence of nature-themed in a literary work is not only used as a setting, but also as a criti...
Abstract: This paper discusses the significance of Ted Hughes’s animal poems, and find out the rela...
This thesis explores Ted Hughes’s poetry between the 1950s and 1980s, focusing on an emergent eco-po...
Abstract Ted Hughes's poetry hints at modern man's self-division and subsequent alienation...
In his verbal still-lifes, Ted Hughes reverses the traditional dynamics of scopophilia by putting th...
In this essay, my primary aim is of course to provide a picture of Hughes’s description of the image...
<p>Ted Hughes is one of the major nature poets in English Literature. However, he is different from ...
Ted Hughes (1930-1998) began his career as a poet with the publication of The Hawk in the Rain in 19...
Ted Hughes’s animal poetry seems, at first, to oscillate back and forward between two poles: creatur...
"And again now, and now, and now"-these words come from Ted Hughes's poem "The Thought-Fox". I begin...