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Hurt Hawks (Author Biography)

 
Notes on Poetry: Hurt Hawks (Author Biography)

Contents:

Introduction
Poem Summary
Themes
Style
Historical Context
Critical Overview
Criticism
Sources
For Further Study


Author Biography

Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1887, Robinson Jeffers was the son of a professor of theology and thusly no stranger to the academic world. He began tutorials at the age of three and a half with his parents, studying biblical history and Greek mythology. By the age of twelve young Jeffers was well read in French, German, Latin, Greek, and English. The University of Western Pennsylvania accepted him for admission when he was fifteen, but his father’s failing health prompted the family to move to California. He remained there for the majority of his life, where he came to be known as a “Californian landscape painter,” due to his abundance of vivid nature poems. At his new university, Occidental, Jeffers edited the school’s literary magazine while taking classes in astronomy, ethics, geology, history, economics, biblical literature, and rhetoric. While later pursuing a graduate degree in literature at the University of Southern California, by then only eighteen years old, Jeffers fell in love with fellow student Una Call Kuster. At the time of their affair she was two years older and already married. Jeffers soon left the country to study philosophy in Switzerland, where he picked up what he would later term “inhumanism,” before returning to USC to study medicine for three years. Although he attempted to avoid Una and their affair by moving to Seattle, when he inherited almost $10,000 in 1912 and moved back to Southern California, they were soon reunited.

After marrying Una in 1913, upon her divorce from her first husband, and tragically losing their baby daughter, Jeffers and his wife moved to Carmel, California, where he built by hand a granite house complete with stone tower. With a clear view of the ocean and the mountains, Jeffers rarely left his isolated fortress, writing over nineteen volumes of poetry from within “Hawk Tower’s” stone walls. He used part of his inheritance to self publish his first volume, Flagons and Apples, that same year, which critics ignored; he later wished that he had instead destroyed the collection of “embarrassingly stilted love poems.” The southern California landscape, which he compared to the “magnificent unspoiled scenery” of Homer’s Ithaca, became his new passion and would dominate the majority of his work from 1914 on. Highly disturbed by two horrific world wars, Jeffers experienced what he later called “the accidental new birth” of his mind, which revealed to him the beginnings of his isolationist philosophy of “Inhumanism.” His wife considered the act of building the stone tower the source of his new vision. “As he helped the masons shift and place the wind and water-worn granite,” she later noted, “I think he realized some kinship with it and became aware of strengths in himself unknown before.” Jeffers found a strange escape in stone imagery from the suffering in the world. He considered it inhuman but beautiful, permanent, and universal compared to our fleeting time in this world.

Jeffers and Una had twin sons while living in the stone house. Over the course of his career Jeffers drew the attention of many critics. Some rejected his work outright as pseudo-prophetic and bloated, while others praised him as the most original of visionary poets of this century. He was the recipient of numerous awards, including Poetry magazine’s Levinson, Eunice Tiethens Memorial and Union League Civic and Arts Foundation Prizes, The Borestone Mountain Poetry Award, and an Academy of American Poets Fellowship. A prolific poet and playwright, self-declared philosopher and prophet, Robinson Jeffers died in 1962 in his sleep after four years of quickly degenerating health.

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