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Mary Barber (poet)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mary Barber
Title page of Poems by Eminent Ladies
Title page of first volume of Poems by Eminent Ladies 2 Vols. (London: R. Baldwin, 1755)
Bornc. 1685
Diedc. 1755 (aged 69–70)
Pen nameSapphira; M.B.
OccupationPoet
SpouseJonathan Barber
ChildrenConstantine Barber (b. 1714); Rupert Barber (1719-1772)

 Literature portal

Mary Barber (c.1685 – c.1755), Irish poet, was a member of Swift's circle. She has been described as "a domestic, small-scale, early eighteenth-century poet of charm and intelligence (remembered particularly for her writing about her children), but also an incisive, often satirical commentator on social and gender issues."[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • 'A Thousand Mornings' With Poet Mary Oliver
  • CC, a community for the future: David Barber at TEDxConnecticutCollege
  • "Tichborne's Elegy" Poem animation

Transcription

This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR News. I'm Rachel Martin. Mary Oliver is a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet whose body of work is largely filled with imagery of the natural world. Her most recent collection is titled "A Thousand Mornings." I spoke with her from member station WSHU in Fairfield, Connecticut. She began our interview by reading her poem, "I Happen to Be Standing." MARY OLIVER: (Reading) I don't know where prayers go or what they do. Do cats pray while they sleep half-asleep in the sun? Does the opossum pray as it crosses the street? The sunflowers, the old black oak growing older every year? I know I can walk through the world along the shore or under the trees with my mind filled with things of little importance. In full self-attendance, a condition I can't really call being alive. Is a prayer a gift or a petition, or does it matter? The sunflowers blaze - maybe that's their way. Maybe the cats are sound asleep, maybe not. While I was thinking this, I happened to be standing just outside my door with my notebook open, which is the way I begin every morning. Then a wren in the privet began to sing. He was positively drenched in enthusiasm. I don't know why. And yet why not? I wouldn't persuade you from whatever you believe or whatever you don't. That's your business. But I thought of the wren singing what could this be if it isn't a prayer? So, I just listened, my pen in the air. MARTIN: Poet Mary Oliver. I asked her if she in fact begins her days the way she describes in this poem, "I Happen to be Standing." OLIVER: Almost. I thought, gee, I do lie a little bit. And I should have said, which is the way I begin most mornings. MARTIN: Talk to me a little bit about that ritual. Do you make it part of the writing discipline to go out into the world and make some observations every day? OLIVER: I think it began with discipline, because I did understand that any artistic venture requires a lot of discipline. But it's no longer a discipline, it's no longer something I think about. I'm often up - on most mornings - I'm up to see the sun. And that rising of the light moves me very much. And I'm used to thinking and feeling in words, so it sort of just happens. MARTIN: Have you always done that? Have you always written in the mornings? OLIVER: Yes, yes. I like the mornings. I like to give the mornings to those first good thoughts. And I suppose in a way it sets up the day. MARTIN: You have written many collections. How is this one different? OLIVER: I think one thing is that prayer has become more useful, interesting, fruitful and, again, almost involuntary in my life. And when I talk about prayer, I mean really what that Rumi says in that wonderful line, there are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground. I'm not theological specifically. I might pick a flower for Shiva as well as say the hundredth prayer. The name of the god doesn't interest me so much as the fact there are so many names of that mystery. MARTIN: Has your work become more prayerful, more spiritual over the years? OLIVER: I would say yes. Maybe a little bit of that is that the two things I loved from a very early age were the natural world and dead poets, which were my pals when I was a kid. But the concern I have for the natural world is really a very sorrowful business. MARTIN: Why sorrowful? OLIVER: Because we aren't doing what we should do to preserve the world. The woods that I loved as a child are entirely gone. The woods that I loved as a young adult are gone. The woods that most recently I walked in, they're not gone but they're full of bicycle trails and - I grew up in a town that was 3,500 people in Ohio, very pastoral and there were woods to go to. That town is now over 250,000 people. And this is happening to the world and I think it is very, very dangerous for our future generations, those of us who believe that the world is not only necessary to us in its pristine state but it is in itself an act of some kind of spiritual thing. I said once, and I think this is true, the world did not have to be beautiful to work, but it is. What does that mean? MARTIN: Because you write about the natural world and because you write these beautiful meditations about your natural surroundings, as so many others have done, how do you find new words to describe what you see? OLIVER: I suppose by paying very close, close, close attention to things and seeing new details. I love words. I love the mechanics of poetry. I often speak of the choreography of the poem on the page. And to find a new word that is accurate and different, you have to be alert for it. It's wonderful. It's fun. But one thing I do know is that a poetry to be understand must be clear. It mustn't be fancy. I have the feeling that a lot of poets writing now are - they sort of tap dance through it. I always feel that whatever isn't necessary should not be in the poem. MARTIN: How do you know when a poem is done? OLIVER: Oh. Well, I don't know that you ever know but in some way you have made a completion of a thought or a mood or whatever you're doing and it's time to go on with the next one. MARTIN: Mary Oliver. Her new book of poetry is called "A Thousand Mornings." She joined us from member station WSHU in Fairfield, Connecticut. Mary, thanks so much for talking with us. It's been a real pleasure. OLIVER: Thank you, thank you. A pleasure for me too.

Life and work

Barber's parents are not known. She married Jonathan Barber, a woollen-draper in Capel Street, Dublin, with whom she had nine children, four of whom survived to adulthood. Her son Rupert Barber (1719-1772) was a crayon and miniature painter whose pastel portrait of Swift hangs in the National Portrait Gallery, London, and her son Constantine Barber (b. 1714) became president of the College of Physicians at Dublin.

She claimed, in the preface to her Poems (1734), that she wrote mainly in order to educate her children, but most commentators agree that she had a larger audience in view and was considerably engaged with intervening in wider social and political issues, as she was with "The Widow's Address" when she argued on behalf of the widow of an army officer. She also used her writing to advocate for her children, as she did with "The Hibernian Poetess's Address and Recommendation of Her Son, to her dear Cousin Esqu; L- M of London."[2]

Barber is an example of the eighteenth-century phenomenon of the "untutored poet, or 'natural genius'": an artist of unprepossessing background who achieved the patronage of literary or aristocratic notables.[3] Swift named her as part of his "triumfeminate," along with poet and scholar Constantia Grierson and literary critic Elizabeth Sican,[4] and maintained that she was a preeminent poet — "the best Poetess of both Kingdoms"[5] — though this assessment was not universally shared. She moved into his circle and knew Laetitia Pilkington, who later became her harshest critic, Mary Delany, and poets Thomas Tickell and Elizabeth Rowe. Swift's patronage was a substantial support to Barber's career and her Poems on several occasions (1734) was successful. The subscription list for the volume was almost "without precedent for its resplendent length and illustrious contents, and it was moreover remarkable given Barber's otherwise pedestrian social standing as an ailing Irish housewife."[6] There were over nine hundred subscribers including various aristocrats and a number of literary luminaries, notably Pope, Arbuthnot, Gay, Walpole, and of course Swift himself. She did not, however, achieve financial stability until at her request and in order to alleviate her financial distress, Swift gave her the English rights to his Complete Collection of Genteel and Ingenious Conversation (1738). Her health declined after the publication of her Poems and subsequent writing was sparse. She did publish some verses about the gout, from which she suffered for over two decades, in the Gentleman's Magazine in 1737. She died in or around 1755.

Barber's critical reputation benefited from the general re-appraisal of past writers that occurred in the 1970s-1980s with the emergence of feminist literary studies. Since then she has received scholarly attention as both a woman writer and "a significant figure" in Irish culture and eighteenth-century studies.[7]

Works

  • "The Widow's Address" (Dublin, 1725)
  • "A Tale Being an Addition to Mr. Gay's Fables" (Dublin, 1728)
  • Contributor. Tunbrigialia, or, Tunbridge Miscellanies, for the Year 1730.
  • Poems on several occasions (1st ed. sold by subscription, printed by Samuel Richardson, 1734; 2nd ed. London: C. Rivington, 1735;[8] reissued 1736).
  • Contributor. Poems by Eminent Ladies 2 Vols. (London: R. Baldwin, 1755): twenty-nine poems

Notes

  1. ^ "Mary Barber." Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present. Accessed 9 Aug. 2022. (Orlando)
  2. ^ Barber, Mary. "The Hibernian Poetess's Address and Recommendation of her son, to her dear Cousin Esq; L M of London". Gentleman's Magazine. 3: 151.
  3. ^ Christopher Fanning, "The Voices of the Dependent Poet: the case of Mary Barber Archived 2011-03-12 at the Wayback Machine," Women's Writing 8.1 (2001): 81.
  4. ^ Probyn, Clive. "Swift, Jonathan (1667–1745)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ Swift, 1733, The correspondence of Jonathan Swift, ed. H. Williams, 5 vols. (1963–5), cite. Lonsdale 119; Coleborne.
  6. ^ Adam Budd, "'Merit in distress': The Troubled Success of Mary Barber," The Review of English Studies 53.210 (2002):204-227 (204).
  7. ^ Coleborne, Bryan. “Barber, Mary (c.1685–1755).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. H. C. G. Matthew and Brian Harrison. Oxford: OUP, 2004. 1 Apr. 2007.
  8. ^ Barber, Mary. Poems on Several Occasions. The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 15657. Accessed 2022-08-08. (WPHP)

Etexts

Resources

See also

This page was last edited on 18 May 2024, at 22:59
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