1. Subscribe Now
  2. Follow Us
  3. Follow us on Facebook Follow us at Twitter Subscribe to our global feed
  4. |
  5. Advertise

A Life in Verse

In his poetry, Stanley Plumly explores mortality—including that of his own self-destructive father.

By Drew Bratcher    Published Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Photograph by Matthew Worden.

Stanley Plumly’s father and grandfather made a fortune in the Ohio and Virginia lumber business. Then came a falling-out. The father, Herman—a sentimental man with a weakness for strong whiskey—left the family firm to work for the competition and was cut out of his father’s will.

It was into this familial turmoil that Plumly was born in 1939. He got a Royal typewriter in high school—when a teacher suggested it as an antidote for his chicken-scratch penmanship. “I loved the sound of the keys,” Plumly says. “It was a kind of music you were playing.”

Since then, in nine elegaic collections of poetry often exploring man’s mortality and the ecstasy of the natural world, Plumly—a professor at the University of Maryland for the past 24 years—has been making sense of his life story.

In “Sweat,” a poem from 2007’s Old Heart, Plumly imagines his father’s beaded brow the summer he built their house:

. . . crude oil and water mixed, as if, by / nature, he were fuel, combustible, on fire, the welder whose / work it was to burn, the builder who dismantles, brick by board, / his own ruined body in order to rebuild.

Plumly’s latest book is Posthumous Keats, a personal biography of the Romantic poet who died at 25 of tuberculosis. Keats was convinced he’d failed as a poet, only to achieve literary immortality in his posthumous life.

How literary scholars will remember Plumly is uncertain. “It’s the fear of every poet that your work will die young,” he says.

A line from Old Heart might be as good a tribute as any: I died, I climbed a tree, I sang.

This article first appeared in the April 2009 issue of The Washingtonian. For more articles from that issue, click here.

Our Valentine's Day Guide

Spending Valentine's Day with that special someone? Flying solo? Either way, here's our guide to make sure it's your best one yet. more

Killer App

Have a bunch of Silicon Valley geeks at Palantir Technologies figured out how to stop terrorists? more

Ask Harry and Louise: Does “My House, My Rules” Apply to Adults?

Our husband-and-wife advice team counsel a man wondering if it’s reasonable to expect his grown son to abide by the house rules. more

Sex—and Other Secrets

Iris Krasnow, the author of bestselling books on relationships, talks about what makes love last. more

A Conversation With Ivanka Trump About Winning the Old Post Office Bid

The Trump Organization says it’s committed to making the historic property the “finest hotel in the country, if not the world.” more


Click to download our new iPhone mobile app

 

Find A ...
Find A Restaurant







  1. Only show Delivery
    Only show Kid Friendly
    Only show Late Night
    Only show Party Space
    Only show Weekend Brunch
Find Events




Find A Happy Hour





  1. search_finda.gif
Find A Spa




  1. search_finda.gif
Find a Home





  1. search_finda.gif
  2. Powered by  
Find A Hotel


  1.   


  2. Reviewed by Washingtonian
  3. Kid Friendly     Valet Parking
    Handicap Accessible    

  4. Childcare
    WiFi
    Pet Friendly
    Bar/Lounge/Dining
    Airport Shuttle
    Salon/Spa
    Swimming Pool
    Fitness Room
    On-site Drycleaning
    Meeting Rooms
    Golf
    Tennis Courts
    Game Room
  5. search_finda.gif
Follow Us Follow us on Facebook Follow us at Twitter Subscribe to our global feed
Get the Magazine Washington Lives By

It's your source for dining, nightlife, news, health, shopping and more in Washington.

Subscribe to Washingtonian

Washingtonian Magazine provides the best insights on:

Subscribe today for only $29.95 for 12 issues.