The Close Chaplet
The Close Chaplet
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About the Book
The Close Chaplet is Laura Riding’s first book, long out of print, originally published in 1926. Riding deliberately ceased writing poems after 1940, when she came to see poetry as irrevocably flawed as a means of expression. These poems demonstrate Riding’s early desire to depart from “the close and well-tilled ground” of traditional lyric poetry.
In his introduction, Mark Jacobs writes that Riding “identifies herself with the pre-moment, the ‘what was there’ before Creation.” From this she begins to develop a theory about the role of women as the origin of all human beings, the only animals with written language. This edition also includes Riding’s essay “A Prophecy or a Plea,” a statement of her poetics initially published in the same year.
The publication of this book was made possible, in part, by a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency.
Author
Laura Riding
Laura Riding was a poet, novelist, short-story writer, essayist, and publisher. While primarily known for the critical works that she co-authored with Robert Graves—A Pamphlet Against Anthologies and A Survey of Modernist Poetry—Riding also left behind an incredibly powerful body of poetry and prose works that, regrettably, remain little read today. These include The Close Chaplet, The Lives of Wives, and The Progress of Stories. Famously rejecting poetry early in her career, she spent the last decades of her life co-writing a theoretical work on linguistics, Rational Meaning, with her husband Schuyler Jackson. She was awarded the Bollingen Prize in 1991, the very same year she died.
Editor
Mark Jacobs
Mark Jacobs is the editor of Essays From Epilogue by Riding and Graves (Carcanet), and has contributed introductions for new editions of her collected poems (Persea Books). He is also the editor of Trent Editions’ Laura (Riding) Jackson series. He corresponded with Laura (Riding) Jackson for 20 years, visiting her at her home in Wabasso, Florida. His memoir on the visit is published in Jack Blackmore’s The Unthronged Oracle (Mereo Books). For twelve years, he served on the board of Laura (Riding) Jackson’s literary estate, before it was passed to Cornell University in 2010. He has worked as a Fellow at Nottingham Trent University, where he founded the Laura (Riding) Jackson Archive.
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Excerpt
PRISMS
What is beheld through glass seems glass.
The quality of what I am
Encases what I am not,
Smooths the strange world.
I perceive it slowly
In my time,
In my material,
As my pride,
As my possession:
The vision is love.
When life crashes like a cracked pane,
Still shall I love
Even the slight grass and the patient dust.
Death also sees, though darkly,
And I must trust then as now
Only another kind of prism
Through which I may not put my hands to touch.