I lived from 1913-1989.
I was from the United States, and am in the Americas category.
May Swenson was born in Logan, Utah, on May 28, 1913. She attended Utah State University, Logan, and received a bachelor's degree in 1939. She taught poetry at Bryn Mawr, the University of North Carolina, the University of California at Riverside, Purdue University and Utah State University and was an editor at New Directions publishers from 1959 to 1966.
Read full description by GypsyDreamer, OP Research Team...
May Swenson became one of America's most inventive and incisive poets. English was actually her second language since Swedish was spoken in her childhood home.
Beginning in 1954, she published ten collections of poetry during her lifetime and one book of translations of the poems of Swedish poet Tomas Transtromer. Swenson's work is wide and varied. Many of her poems delight in the natural world. Others incorporate scientific research, particularly that having to do with space exploration. Others root themselves in love and eroticism, especially lesbian sexuality. Many of her love poems were published as a single collection in 1991 as The Love Poems of May Swenson.
Nature and sexuality are not separate categories in her work; to be a part of Nature, as we all are, joins us to a common sexual energy. Her strongest love poems, such as Fireflies, Dark Wild Honey, and Wednesday at The Waldorf, rely on Nature imagery for much of their vitality and beauty.
May Swenson died in Oceanview, Delaware, in 1989
Published Poetry:
Another Animal (1954)
A Cage of Spines (1958)
To Mix with Time: New and Selected Poems (1963)
Poems to Solve (1963)
Half Sun, Half Sleep: New Poems (1967)
More Poems to Solve (1971)
New and Selected Things Taking Place (1978)
In Other Words (1987)
The Love Poems of May Swenson (1991)
Nature: Poems Old and New (1994)
May Out West (1996)
Prose:
The Contemporary Poet as Artist and Critic (1964)
Anthologies:
Iconographs (1970) Translations of six contemporary Swedish poets.
Windows and Stones: Selected Poems of Tomas Tranströmer (1972)
Bibliography and image source: Academy of American Poets, Utah State University
Popular poetry
What does love look like? We know
the shape of death. Death is a cloud
35 lines, 4 comments
When in the mask of night there shone that cut,
we were riddled. A probe reached down
30 lines
I like being in your apartment, and not disturbing anything.
As in the woods I wouldn't want to move a tree,
23 lines
Body my house
my horse my hound
21 lines, 1 comment
Blue, but you are Rose, too,
and buttermilk, but with blood
32 lines, 1 comment
The binocular owl,
fastened to a limb
24 lines, 2 comments
In the pond in the park
all things are doubled;
64 lines
We move by means of our mud bumps.
We bubble as do the dead but more slowly.
16 lines
The flag is folded
lengthwise, and lengthwise again,
32 lines
The popcorn is greasy, and I forgot to bring a Kleenex.
A pill that’s a bomb inside the stomach of a man inside
31 lines, 2 comments
Start a forum topic about this poet