The Garden of Proserpine (An Exerpt)

"'The Garden of Proserpine (An Exerpt)' is a 'poem [that] focuses on one stanza from Swinburne's poem of the same name to explore its theme in more detail. Upon loading the e-poem, an image of a garden appears with the text of the 11th stanza (out of 12), but the image immediately becomes darker and muted in its colors, perhaps to reinforce the notion of how life fades. Proserpine, famous for being tricked by Hades into being his wife by eating pomegranate seeds, now plants seeds whose fruit brings death to all to consume it. Yet this is not necessarily a bad thing, as this stanza points out, since everything— even endless flowing rivers— needs that final rest. McCabe's interface is very simple yet manages to direct our attention to each line of the poem by enlarging the lines whenever we place our mouse over them and returning them to their small original size and position when we move the pointer away." -- From I Love E-Poetry

1 COPY IN THE NEXT

Poems That Go

Published in 2001 by Poems That GO in Volume 5.

This copy was given to Megan Sapner Ankerson and Ingrid Ankerson in Spring 2019.

PUBLICATION TYPE

Journal