Mary Oliver, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, was described by the New York Times as “far and away, this country’s best-selling poet.” Her poetry collections include Swan Blue Iris; Why I Wake EarlyThirstNew and Selected Poems, Volume One; and New and Selected Poems, Volume Two. Her prose includes Our World, which is a collection of photographs by Molly Malone Cook accompanied by Oliver's writing.

Millay_house
Edna St. Vincent Millay's library at Steepletop. Photo by Molly Malone Cook from the book Our World.

Edna St. Vincent Millay died on October 19, 1950; she was 58. It was a too short, turbulent, diligent life—a life of life, a life of work. She was the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry. She was the chosen representative figure of the ’20s, beautiful, flamboyant, honorable to the spirits of love and of art, yet, in those early years, mischievous, even racy. In book after book, she wrote more deeply, more quietly, with a lyrical finery, a feminist stance, an affinity with the natural world, an understanding of the necessity in the world for kindness, for participation.

The critics, with the exception of Edmund Wilson, have mostly hashed her work, making it smaller by emphasis on the early poems. Who remembers her libretto for Deems Taylor’s opera The King’s Henchman, or the plays, or the many elegant sonnets and poems in later books such as Buck in the Snow; Huntsman, What Quarry; and the posthumous Mine the Harvest? Or the essay Fear, really an open letter to the Governor of Massachusetts on behalf of Sacco and Vanzetti? That she had some bad times in a good life seems of higher interest to her biographers (so far) than the audacity of her spirit, the breadth of her work. Well, hundreds of readers—thousands of readers—young as well as old, do remember. Time will bring its balance, its more just correspondence between the poet and the work. To which she gave such unflagging effort, until the moment of her departure which was altogether too early.

A Personal Note: When I was still in high school, in 1953, I wrote to Norma Millay, the poet’s sister, asking if I might visit the poet’s home, where Norma Millay was then living. The answer was yes. So, sometimes, the emboldened young fly into their lives. I lived there, off and on, for a good number of years. I don’t know if spirits always haunt their earthly homes, but I know that sometimes they do. Her presence was everywhere.

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5 responses to “Mary Oliver on Edna St. Vincent Millay”

  1. Jane Avatar
    Jane

    Thanks for your comment on my blog about Mary Oliver’s “The Poet Goes to Fenway”. I have to admit I got that poem from a Red Sox Forum and the connection was to the current play-off games. But I’m happy to have found your website and will be back to read the rest of her poems.

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  2. Hecate Demetersdatter, Runnymeade Conspirator Avatar

    Oh, I would love it if Ms. Oliver would blog regularly. Her work is simply transcendent.

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  3. Matt Avatar

    I too would love it to read more Mary Oliver. Who wouldn’t? Ms. Oliver, thank you. Please, please more?
    I read Millay more often than I read her critics or critics generally. Wilson is the exception for me as well.
    I’ve been memorizing “Mountain Lion on East Hill Road, Austerlitz, N.Y>” today. An absolutely lovely experience, which would not have happened without my having read this blog. Thanks again!!!!

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  4. Catie Avatar
    Catie

    Thank you for the honest appreciation of “Vincent”- a rogue, a wit and a beauty. Her sonnets reached to me in Iowa, where I often felt like a lonely tree.
    I hope for a resurgence of interest in her work.

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  5. Gail Gray Avatar
    Gail Gray

    I’ve loved Edna St. V.M. since I was a young woman and have always felt inspired by her work. I get a ‘so take that’ kind of feeling when I read her. Last summer I read “Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay” by Nancy Milford and highly recommend it. But Edna died so horribly (in a drunken stupor she fell down the stairs) like so many creative people. Last year I also read bios on Kinsley Amins, E.A. Poe and Phillip Larkin – all carried off by drink.

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