FOLLOW US ON:
GET THE NEWSLETTER
CONTACT US
‘Your wife is dead’: Lost Ted Hughes poem about Sylvia Plath’s suicide published
10.07.2010
05:30 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
A poem by Ted Hughes, considered lost, was published today in The New Statesman magazine after being discovered in the British Museum among his papers. In it, Hughes addresses the painful suicide of his wife, Sylvia Plath. The poem, written in the 70s, would seem to be the “missing link” from Hughes’ 1998 book about his marriage to Plath, Birthday Letters, as none of the poems in that book discuss the circumstances of her death.

Carolyn Kellog, writing at the Los Angeles Times, Jacket Copy blog:

Actor Jonathan Pryce read part of the poem for the [BBC4 Radio] broadcast, reading:

Late afternoon Friday
my last sight of you alive
burning your letter to me
in the ashtray
with that strange smile

Sylvia Plath, who today is best-known as the author of the autobiographical novel “The Bell Jar,” was a young poet living in England when she met Ted Hughes, then also a young poet. The two married in 1956, moved to the U.S. for three years, and then returned to England. They had two children together.

Plath was 30 when she killed herself by inhaling the fumes from an unlit oven. Hughes went on to become one of the significant British poets of the 20th century, serving as British poet laureate from 1984 until his death in 1998.

The poem includes how Hughes learned of Plath’s death, in its final lines.

And I had started to write when the telephone
Jerked awake, in a jabbering alarm,
Remembering everything. It recovered in my hand.
Then a voice like a selected weapon
Or a measured injection,
Coolly delivered its four words
Deep into my ear: ‘Your wife is dead.

 

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
05:30 pm
|
Queer Eye for Revolutionary Style! Get Malcolm X’s HOT look!
10.07.2010
05:08 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
OUT’s Junior Fashion Editor Brent Coover shows you exactly how to make Malcolm X’s look work for you!

The best part about this is the noteworthy lack of irony!
 
image
 
1. White button-down shirt by Alfani available at Macy’s, $50

2. Yukel eyeglasses by Moscot, $199

3. Downtown wool tie by J. Crew, $59.50

4. Tie bar by Alfred Dunhill, $195

5. Black leather messenger bag by Emporio Armani, $395
 

 
Thank you Nico!

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
05:08 pm
|
Star Wars dating tips: Luke Skywalker, sex machine
10.07.2010
04:48 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
A mashup of a 50s instructional film on dating and Star Wars. Quite funny.
 

 
Via Have you seen this?!

Posted by Marc Campbell
|
10.07.2010
04:48 pm
|
Soul Dracula: Things that do the bump in the night
10.07.2010
03:56 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
“Soul Dracula” by Hotblood, from 1977, offers a eurodisco take on the king of Vampires. I guess that… um, people were a little bit easier to entertain back then, eh?
 

 
Via PCL Linkdump

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
03:56 pm
|
The F.B.I. is still harassing John Lennon 30 years after his death
10.07.2010
03:47 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
 

John Lennon has been dead for 30 years, but the Federal Bureau of Investigation is still on the case. On Wednesday morning a small pop-culture memorabilia shop in Midtown opened an 836-lot auction timed to what would have been Lennon’s 70th birthday, which is Saturday. The prized item was a set of Lennon’s fingerprints made in 1976 as part of his application for citizenship. Minimum bid: $100,000. But after an hourlong standoff involving cellphone calls, faxes and meetings with an agent in a parked car outside the East 57th Street storefront, the F.B.I. served the shop — called Gotta Have It! — with a subpoena and seized the fingerprint card, which was made at a New York police station on May 8, 1976, and bears a signature and the name John Winston Ono Lennon.

Read the full article on the New York Times website here.

Thanks Joshua JKanizzle Cunningham

 

Posted by Marc Campbell
|
10.07.2010
03:47 pm
|
John Lennon double dose of goodness: Copping a feel with Andy Warhol and Ready Steady Go interview
10.07.2010
03:24 pm
Topics:
Tags:

image
I want to hold your gland.
 
If Lennon hadn’t chosen music as his profession, he could have had a career as a comic actor. Here he is being a brilliant wiseass on Ready, Steady, Go.
 

Posted by Marc Campbell
|
10.07.2010
03:24 pm
|
The circle of life
10.07.2010
01:53 pm
Topics:
Tags:
Posted by Tara McGinley
|
10.07.2010
01:53 pm
|
Hoarder Seeking Roommate
10.07.2010
11:58 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 

“Hi, I am a 37 year old, single male hoarder looking for a housemate. I have a two-bedroom, one bathroom house in the Silverlake/Los Feliz area of Los Angeles (pictures below). I am looking for someone to help with the rent and bills. Price is negotiable.

Please, no drugs or smoking in the house, or any late night guests or parties. No pets. Perfect for a college/grad student.”

NO PETS?!?!? And WHO would bring someone over to this dump in the first place? WOW!

Via Doug Stanhope’s Twitter feed

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
11:58 am
|
Happy Birthday Dan Savage!
10.07.2010
11:06 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
A very happy birthday wish to the awesome Dan Savage, sex advice columnist and LGBT activist extraordinaire. Dan Savage is, truly, one of the sanest people living in America today and we salute him and his admirable efforts to educate (and comfort) people through his work, today, on his 46th birthday. Happy birthday Dan, thank you for being you!.

Below, Dan Savage is asked about the “weirdest letter” he’s ever received doing his sex advice column. The punch line is hilarious:
 

 
Previously on Dangerous Minds: No more LGBT youth suicides: support Dan Savage’s It Gets Better project

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
11:06 am
|
Fresh Metzger
10.07.2010
09:45 am
Topics:
Tags:

image
 
Stale Metzger is the worst, isn’t it?

(How did I miss this one when I was picking covers from the Waxidermy gallery yesterday? Thank you Mark for pointing this out in the comments)

Posted by Richard Metzger
|
10.07.2010
09:45 am
|
Page 1973 of 2338 ‹ First  < 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 >  Last ›