Maxine Kumin

’s Life And Career Essay, Research Paper


Emory Elliott, et. al.


"There is no more, no less, peace of mind in the disciplined


life of the barnyard than there is in the routine of the office," writes Maxine Kumin


in In Deep: Country Essays (1987) after many years of raising horses on her New


Hampshire farm. Typical of Kumin’s temperate manner, this statement reflects the


unsentimental relationship to nature and the sober acceptance of human limitations that


characterize her poetry. Family relationships, husbandry, and the inner life of women as


they negotiate various roles–mother, daughter, sister, lover–are the subjects that have


dominated Kumin’s verse since the appearance of her first book, Halfway, in 1961.


Her maturation as a poet coincides with the emergence in American literature of women


writing more frankly than ever before about their experiences. Although she has rarely


been as explicitly political as such feminist poets as Adrienne Rich, Kumin typically


summons to her aid a vision of female solidarity, as in the prayerlike hope expressed in


"The Envelope" (1978): "May we carry our mothers forth in our


bellies."


A close friend of the poet Anne Sexton until Sexton’s suicide in 1975, Kumin has said


that they frequently shared their works in progress and had an enormous influence on each


other. Kumin is, however, careful to draw distinctions. Calling herself a skeptic, she


points out in a 1985 interview with Diana George that Sexton was "much more of an


extremist and an absolutist in her search for a deity." A critic has claimed that


Kumin "keeps her demons bridled," refraining, for the most part, from the


explicit exposition of psychic trauma that marks the work of Sexton and of Sylvia Plath.


Understatement, rather than rage or passion, is Kumin’s hallmark. Thus, the burning houses


in "The Longing to Be Saved" (1978) indirectly suggest Kumin’s ambivalence about


the domestic settings so prevalent in her work. Are not we all, she seems to ask, yearning


to be rescued from our homes?


Kumin has consistently favored traditional poetic forms, making use of rhyme schemes,


the iambic line, and a variety of quatrain-based (four-line) stanzas. "When I’m


writing free-verse," she complains, "I feel as though I am in Indiana, where


it’s absolutely flat and you can see the horizon 360 degrees around. You feel as though


you have no eyelids, you can’t blink. I lose, I have no sense of the line."


From American Literature: A Prentice Hall Anthology. Vol. II. Ed. Emory Elliott,


Linda K. Kerber, A. Walton Litz, and Terence Martin. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall,


1991. Copyright ? 1991 by Prentice Hall. Reprinted with permission.


Rachel Hadas


Increasingly since her move to the country, Kumin’s poetry has concerned itself with


the natural world. In matter-of-fact tones sometimes darkened by elegy, her work


chronicles the lives and deaths of animals and the cycle of the seasons. The fragile state


of the environment is another compelling theme. Except as an occasion for mourning


illnesses and deaths (the later poems abound in dark dreams), the human world seems


marginal in Kumin’s imagination, in contrast to the rural poems’ rootedness in daily


experience.


Kumin’s work is less daring and stylistically distinctive than that of such


contemporaries as Plath and Sexton (Kumin has a poem about surviving her friend Sexton).


The tone is steady, grounded, almost stoical in comparison; the language less likely to


transcend its occasion and engage in lyric flights. Kumin’s early work is more concerned


with formal structures than her later work, but always her language is subordinated to


observation and thought.


From The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-century Poetry in English. Ed. Ian


Hamilton. New York: Oxfo

rd University Press, 1994. Copyright ? 1994 by Oxford University


Press.


Meg Schoerke


Born and raised in Philadelphia, Kumin, the daughter of Jewish parents, attended


Catholic schools. She received her BA. in 1946 and her M.A. in 1948 from Radcliffe


College. In June 1946 she married Victor Kumin, an engineering consultant; they have two


daughters and a son. In 1957, she studied poetry with John Holmes at the Boston Center for


Adult Education. There she met Anne Sexton, with whom she started a friendship that


continued until Sexton’s suicide in 1974. Kumin taught English from 1958-1961 and


1965-1968 at Tufts University; from 1961-1963 she was a scholar at the Radcliffe Institute


for Independent Study. She has also held appointments as a visiting lecturer and poet in


residence at many American colleges and universities. Since 1976, she and her husband have


lived on a farm in Warner, New Hampshire, where they breed Arabian and quarter horses.


Kumin’s many awards include the Eunice Tietjens Memorial Prize from Poetry (1972), the


Pulitzer Prize for Poetry (1973) for Up Country, an American Academy and


Institute of Arts a Letters Award for excellence in literature (1980), an Academy of


American Poets fellowship (1986), and six honorary degrees. In 1981-982, she served as the


poetry consultant to the Library of Congress.


Kumin is the author of eleven books of poetry: Halfway (1961), The Privilege


(1965), The Nightmare Factory (1970), Up Country: Poems of New England


(1972), House, Bridge, Fountain, Gate (1975), The Retrieval System (1978), Our


Ground Time Here Will Be Brief–New and Selected Poems (1982), Closing the Ring:


Selected Poems (1984), The Long Approach (1985), Nurture (1989), and Looking


for Luck (1992). Her fiction includes a book of short stories, Why Can’t We Live


Together Like Civilized Human Beings? (1982), and four novels, Through Dooms of


Love (1965), The Passions of Uxport (1968), The Abduction (1971), and The


Designated Heir (1974). To Make a Prairie: Essays on Poets, Poetry, and Country


Living (1980) consists of interviews with Kumin, her reviews of poetry by her peers,


and several essays on her own poetry; In Deep: Country Essays (1987) offers


seasonal meditations on rural life. She has also published over twenty books for children,


four of which she co-authored with Sexton.


Critics have often compared Kumin with Elizabeth Bishop because of her meticulous


observations, and with Robert Frost, for she frequently devotes her attention to the


rhythms of life in rural New England. Likewise, because of her autobiographical bent, she


has been grouped with confessional poets such as Sexton and Robert Lowell. But unlike


Sexton and Lowell, Kumin eschews high rhetoric and adopts a plain style that is often


invigorated by her experiments with formal verse, but sometimes flattens into prosaism in


her free verse.


Throughout her career as a poet, Kumin has struck a balance between her sense of life’s


transience and her fascination with the dense physical presence of the world around her.


At its worst, this latter impulse causes her to weigh her poetry down with catalogs of


material details and an overabundance of similes; such poems seem to be merely exercises


in record keeping. But at its best, her poetry offers details whose blend of quirkiness


and exactness beautifully ground her meditations on endurance in the face of loss.


See Jean Gould, "Anne Sexton–Maxine Kumin," in Modern American Women Poets


(1984), pp. 151-175. Deborah Pope, "A Rescuer by Temperament: The Poetry of


Maxine Kumin," in A Separate Vision: Isolation in Contemporary Women’s Poetry (1984),


pp. 54-83.


From Women’s Writing in the United States. Ed. Cathy N. Davidson and Linda


Wagner-Martin. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995. Copyright ? 1995 by Oxford


University Press.

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