How To Use Ted Hughes In A Sentence
- The visiting literati included the poet laureate Ted Hughes and his wife, Sylvia Plath.
- Sylvia Plath's diaries have shown she endured a relationship with Ted Hughes - one in which she subjugated herself and her talent for the greater good of him and his.
- John Betjeman and Ted Hughes had both declined my invitation to do this.
- “Reality was giving its lesson,” wrote Ted Hughes in one of his Crow poems, “Its mishmash of scripture and physics,/With here, brains in hands, for example,/And there, legs in a treetop.” Don’t Fear the Reaper
- In today's ecological crisis, British Poet Laureate-Ted Hughes, makes his persistent poetic pursuit of the re-establishment of the harmony between humans and nature.
- The late English Poet Laureate - Ted Hughes mainsequence Crow tells how the protagonist grows to maturity.
- Poetry has been especially impacted: the Dawn-esque symbolism of Yeats informs Ted Hughes, and much Seamus Heaney and John Berryman.
- Lapsing into Kerryspeak, the senator goes on to recount that he was ‘not unmindful of this duality of meanings’ when his campaign adopted Hughes's phrase.
- Ted Hughes's reply, which opens by describing our dispute as a ‘corrosive misunderstanding’, is worth extensive quotation.
- Her posthumous book of poetry was edited and published by her estranged husband, Ted Hughes and her novel, The Bell Jar, became a bestseller and a film in the 1980s.