Rosemary Tonks

Rosemary Tonks

Rosemary Tonks (born 1932) is an English poet. She published her adult poetry from about 1960 to 1972. What has happened to her since the 1970s remains unknown.Motion, Andrew (2004). "The Times" (London); Oct 30, 2004 p.8] Astley, Neil (2004), "Being Alive", Bloodaxe Books. Quoted in [http://www.theindexer.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=65&Itemid=44 "The Indexer", April 2005.] Accessed 12 January, 2007]

Early life

Rosemary Tonks was born in London and educated at Wentworth School, London. Expelled in 1948, she published a children's story in the same year. She married at age 19, and the couple moved to Karachi, where she began to write poetry. Attacks of typhoid and polio forced a return to England. She later lived briefly in Paris.Tuma]

Career

She worked for the BBC, writing stories and reviewing poetry for the BBC European Service. She published poems in collections and The Observer, the New Statesman, "Encounter" and "Poetry Review"; she read them on the BBC's "Third Programme". She also wrote "poetic novels".

Her work appears in many anthologies, including Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry (ed. Keith Tuma), Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse, British Poetry since 1945 and "The Firebox: Poetry in Britain and Ireland after 1945" (ed. Sean O'Brien).

Tonks stopped publishing poetry in the early 1970s, at about the same time as her conversion to fundamentalist Christianity. [Wynne-Davies, Marian (1997). [http://www.bloomsburymagazine.com/ARC/detail.asp?entryid=109491&bid=9 "Rosemary Tonks"] , in "Dictionary of English Literature", (Bloomsbury).] Nothing is known publicly about her subsequent life. As Andrew Motion wrote in 2004, she "Disappeared! What happened? Because I admire her poems, I've been trying to find out for years... no trace of her seems to survive - apart from the writing she left behind." The "Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry", which published three of Tonks' poems in 2001, states that permission to use her poems was obtained from a literary agency, Sheil Land Associates, Ltd.

Character of her work

Tonks' poems offer a stylised view of an urban literary sub-culture around 1960 full of hedonism and decadence. The poet seems to veer from the ennui of Charles Baudelaire to exuberant disbelief of modern civilisation. There are illicit love affairs in seedy hotels and scenes of café life across Europe and the Middle East; there are sage reflections on men who are shy with women. She often targets the pathetic pretensions of writers and intellectuals. Yet she is often buoyant and chatty, bemused rather than critical, even self-deprecating.

She believed that poetry should look good on a printed page as well as sound good when read: "There is an excitement for the "eye" in a poem on the page which is completely different from the ear’s reaction". [O'Driscoll, Dennis (2003) [http://www.poems.com/essaodri.htm "The outnumbered poet"] "Poetry Daily". Accessed 12 January, 2007] Of her style, she said "I have developed a visionary modern lyric, and, for it, an idiom in which I can write lyrically, colloquially, and dramatically. My subject is city life—with its sofas, hotel corridors, cinemas, underworlds, cardboard suitcases, self-willed buses, banknotes, soapy bathrooms, newspaper-filled parks; and its anguish, its enraged excitement, its great lonely joys." [ [http://www.bartleby.com/66/6/61406.html 61406. Tonks, Rosemary. The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996 ] ]

Her poem, "The Sofas, Fogs and Cinemas" ends::— All this sitting about in cafés to calm down:Simply wears me out. And their idea of literature!:The idiotic cut of the stanzas; the novels, full up, gross.

:I have lived it, and I know too much.:My café nerves are breaking me:With black, exhausting information.Lucie-Smith p.247]

Assessment of her work

She was praised by critics as a cosmopolitan poet of considerable innovation and originality. She has been described as one of the very few modern English poets who has genuinely tried to learn something from modern French poets such as Paul Eluard about symbolism and surrealism. Al Alvarez said of "Notes on Cafés and Bedrooms" that it showed "an original sensibility in motion".Lucie-Smith p.245] Edward Lucie-Smith said that "the movements of an individual awareness - often rather self-conscious in its singularity - supply the themes of most of her work." Daisy Goodwin commented on her poem, "Story of a Hotel Room", about infidelity, "This poem should be read by anyone about to embark on an affair thinking that it's just a fling. It is much harder than you know to separate sex from love." [Goodwin, Daisy (2004), "Poems to Last a Lifetime". Quoted in [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2004/11/07/boself.xml&page=3 "Selling poems to the people"] by Andrew O'Hagan, "Daily Telegraph" 9 November, 2004. Accessed 12 January, 2007]

Publications

Poetry

* "Notes on Cafés and Bedrooms" (1963).
* "Iliad of Broken Sentences" (1967)

Poetic novels

* "Opium Fogs" (1963)
* "The Bloater" (1968)
* "Businessmen as Lovers" (1969)
* "The Halt during the Chase" (1972)

ee also

*1932 in poetry

References

* Tuma, Keith (ed), "Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry" contains a biography of Tonks credited to "Tuma"
* Lucie-Smith, Edward (1970), "British Poetry since 1945"

Notes

External links

* [http://www.amazon.com/dp/019512894X/ Amazon.com review of Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry]
* [http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/2601/tonks.html "Story Of A Hotel Room"]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tonks — may refer to: *Henry Tonks, artist *Lewi Tonks, American quantum physicist especially known for the discovery of the Tonks Girardeau gas *Nymphadora Tonks, a fictional character in J. K. Rowling s Harry Potter novels *Andromeda Tonks or Ted Tonks …   Wikipedia

  • Anthology of Twentieth-Century British and Irish Poetry — is a poetry anthology edited by Keith Tuma, and published in 2001 by Oxford University Press. Tuma is an American academic, and author of the somewhat despairing Fishing by Obstinate Isles: Modern and Postmodern British Poetry and American… …   Wikipedia

  • Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse — The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse was a poetry anthology edited by Philip Larkin, and published in 1973 by Oxford University Press with ISBN 0 19 812137 7. Larkin writes in the short Preface that the selection is wide rather than …   Wikipedia

  • British Poetry since 1945 — is a poetry anthology edited by Edward Lucie Smith, first published in 1970 by Penguin Books. The anthology is a careful attempt to take account of the whole span of post war British poetry [Middleton, Peter (2004) [http://www.poetrymagazines.org …   Wikipedia

  • Recluse — A recluse is someone in isolation who hides away from the attention of the public, a person who lives in solitude, i.e. seclusion from intercourse with the world. The word is from the Latin recludere , which means shut up or sequester .A person… …   Wikipedia

  • 1932 in poetry — yearbox2 in?=in poetry in2?=in literature cp=19th century c=20th century cf=21st century yp1=1929 yp2=1930 yp3=1931 year=1932 ya1=1933 ya2=1934 ya3=1935 dp3=1900s dp2=1910s dp1=1920s d=1930s da=1940s dn1=1950s dn2=1960s dn3=1970s|Events*W. B.… …   Wikipedia

  • Howard Moscoe — (born circa 1940) is a city councillor in Toronto, Canada, representing Ward 15 in the western part of Eglinton Lawrence. Among the most prominent and longest serving councillors in the city, he is also known for an outspokenness which has landed …   Wikipedia

  • 1990 New Year Honours — Contents 1 United Kingdom 1.1 Life Peers 1.2 Privy Counsellors 1.3 Knights Bachelor 1.4 Order of the …   Wikipedia

  • Mae West — This article is about the actress. For other uses, see Mae West (disambiguation). Mae West Publicity photo for Night After Night (1932) Born Mary Jane West August 17, 1893 …   Wikipedia

  • Bob Rae — Infobox Officeholder honorific prefix = The Honourable name = Robert Keith Rae honorific suffix = PC, OC, OOnt, QC, BA LLB (Toronto) BPhil (Oxon) LLD (LSUC, hc) LLD (Toronto, hc) LLD (Assumption, hc) , MP caption = Bob Rae speaking to the press… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”