Theodore Roethke Reads In a Dark Time from Poets Speak
View poem from Poetry Foundation

This beautiful poem in The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke appears in a section called “Sequence, Sometimes Metaphysical.” It is a penetrating rendering, at one and the same time, of “pure despair” and of transcendence; of the curse and simultaneous exaltation of heightened awareness; of the personal experience of “madness,” “my shadow pinned against a sweating wall,” “the edge is what I have,” and of a more profound soul-searching that contemplates union with nature and with God: “I climb out of my fear / The mind enters itself, and God the mind, / And one is One, free in the tearing wind.”
Roethke, a Pulitzer Prize winning poet, suffered from manic depressive illness. This poem is remarkable in conveying a life experienced between extremes and at the edge; we might even recognize elements here that surface from time to time in ourselves. But the poet probes beyond mere personal anguish and that is, perhaps, how he survives.
A Film about Theodore Roethke from PublicResource.Org
Remarkable People – Theodore Roethke by Seattle Colleges Cable Television
The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke
New York: Doubleday, 1966, 270 pages
An earlier version of this review was published in the NYU Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database (Litmed).
Web image by Anchor Lee