Woman to Man (poem)

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Written1946
First published inMeanjin Papers
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
"Woman to Man"
by Judith Wright
Written1946
First published inMeanjin Papers
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Publication dateSpring 1946
Lines20

"Woman to Man" (1946) is a poem by Australian poet Judith Wright.[1]

It was originally published in Meanjin Papers in Spring 1946,[2] and was subsequently reprinted in the author's single-author collections and a number of Australian poetry anthologies.[1]

"The eyeless laborer in the night", of the first line of the poem, is the unborn foetus of a pregnancy that Wright would never experience, as she had been told as a teenager that she would never have children.[3]

Critical reception

Writing on the Red Page of The Bulletin a reviewer commented that this poem "moves into midnight...and there, in a midnight which represents the darkness where the unborn child takes shape,...and the darkness of death, and the darkness of not-being in which the unborn embryo, dead at the beginning of its life-cycle...there in that midnight at once creative and destructive, the primal midnight of the universe, life and death wrestle in the book".[4]

Publication history

See also

References

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