| At an early age Berryman's childhood was
scarred by his father's suicide in Florida after a quarrel with his mother, and
his own turbulent life - much of it spent battling alcoholism - ended when he
threw himself from a bridge in Minneapolis in 1972. His poetry is colloquial,
erudite, witty, lyrical and intensely confessional - the poet's own neuroses and
insecurities are scarcely far from the view. Robert Lowell once described Berryman's
verse as "more tearful and funny than we can easily bear." In his best-known work
the Dream Songs sequence, Berryman speaks, using an array of first, second
and third person voices, through the persona of Henry, a modern-day bar-room Hamlet
struggling to cope with his own sorry existence. By 1972 it was a struggle Berryman
himself was no longer able to continue. |