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“Return of the Goddess Artemis” by Robert Graves (1947)
This poem was published a few years before “The White Goddess” in the Poetry Foundation’s literary journal, Poetry. It also explores the theme of the Goddess mythology. Artemis appears as a “crane” (Line 12) in this piece, which can be compared and contrasted with the White Goddess appearing as a mountain. Both are examples of manifest deity, and both have a cruel and terrifying presence. However, the difference in scale makes the tone of “Return of the Goddess Artemis” lighter and more comical.
“The God Called Poetry” by Robert Graves (1920)
“The God Called Poetry” appeared in Graves’s 1920 book Country Sentiment. This is several decades before Graves became focused on the Goddess myth; the editors of Robert Graves: The Complete Poems assert that his Goddess “obsession” began in 1944 (xli). While this earlier poem and “The White Goddess” both deal with the divine, “The God Called Poetry” asserts the deity in charge of poetry is male. Graves’s descriptions of the White Goddess focus on her deathly whiteness, while the God is “Black as pitch and white as snow” (Line 53). The God has two heads, while the Goddess has a threefold nature.
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By Robert Graves