I would not usually be prepared to explain away poetry on the grounds there should likely be enough information in a poem to determine the gist. But I do feel this one deservers one, on exception. First my dawning thought on poetry is that the roots of its power are directly related to that of mysticsm, those whom cannot relate to such being psychologically disconected to something like a universal past thus revealing a dissinterest in art. Robert Graves on the subject wrote what ethnographers disagree on. But which i find exciting. That the poets place is to bring back a time before the patriarchal takeover from 'the all-powerful threefold Goddess, the mother, the bride, the layer-out'.' That the test of the poet was the articulated accuracy of the White Goddess. From a poem by Ted Hughes titled 'The Woman With Such High Heels She Looked Dangerous' is a quote of something I liken to this dawning of opinion: Men become wolves, but a wolf has become a woman. I'd say I have always had this motif in poetry written in this comment and the explanation might be why. It is this and that naively uptill now i have never realised how unoriginal it is to write poetry influenced from a Jungian perspective. Don't I feel stupid? That is what I think this poem is.
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I would not usually be prepared to explain away poetry on the grounds there should likely be enough information in a poem to determine the gist. But I do feel this one deservers one, on exception. First my dawning thought on poetry is that the roots of its power are directly related to that of mysticsm, those whom cannot relate to such being psychologically disconected to something like a universal past thus revealing a dissinterest in art. Robert Graves on the subject wrote what ethnographers disagree on. But which i find exciting. That the poets place is to bring back a time before the patriarchal takeover from 'the all-powerful threefold Goddess, the mother, the bride, the layer-out'.' That the test of the poet was the articulated accuracy of the White Goddess. From a poem by Ted Hughes titled 'The Woman With Such High Heels She Looked Dangerous' is a quote of something I liken to this dawning of opinion: Men become wolves, but a wolf has become a woman. I'd say I have always had this motif in poetry written in this comment and the explanation might be why. It is this and that naively uptill now i have never realised how unoriginal it is to write poetry influenced from a Jungian perspective. Don't I feel stupid? That is what I think this poem is.