Not Waving but Drowning
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"Not Waving but Drowning" is a poem by the British poet Stevie Smith. It was published in 1957, as part of a collection of the same title.<ref name=Sternlicht>Sternlicht, Sanford V.Stevie Smith. Twayne Publishers (1990) p. 63.</ref> The most famous of Smith's poems,<ref name=Hotz-Davies>Hotz-Davies, Ingrid. "My Name is Finis: The Loneliness of Stevie Smith". Rodopi (1994) p.233.</ref> it gives an account of a drowned man, whose distant movements in the water had been mistaken for waving.<ref name=Rose>Rose, Gillian. Mourning becomes the law: philosophy and representation. Cambridge University Press (1996) p.38.</ref> The poem was accompanied by one of Smith's drawings, as was common in her work.
The poem's personal significance has been the topic of several pieces of literary criticism, because Smith was treated for psychological problems. She contemplated suicide at the age of eight, after what she described as a difficult childhood and her struggle with the fact that her father abandoned her.<ref name=Walsh>Walsh, Jessica. "Stevie Smith: Girl Interrupted" Papers on Language and Literature Vol.40.</ref>
Interpretations
Like many of Smith's poems, "Not Waving but Drowning" is short, consisting of only twelve lines. The narrative takes place from a third-person perspective, and describes the circumstances surrounding the "dead man" described in line one. In line five, the poem suggests that the man who has died "always loved larking," which causes his distress signals to be discounted.<ref name=Hotz-Davies/>
The image that Smith attached to the poem shows the form of a girl from the waist up, with her wet hair hanging over her face. Although the image goes with a poem about a man drowning, the girl's expression appears incongruous with the text of the poem, as it forms what Smith scholar Laura Severin describes as a "mysterious smile".<ref name=Severin/> Jannice Thaddeus suggests that the speaker of the poem, like other figures in Smith's works, changes from male to female as part of a theme of androgyny that exists in many of the poems found in Selected Poems.<ref name=Taddeus>Thaddeus, Janice."Stevie Smith and the Gleeful Macabre," Contemporary Poetry Vol. 111, No. 4, 1978, pp. 36-49.</ref> Severin suggests that the figure might be Mary, a character in another poem by Smith titled "Cool as a Cucumber". The drawing was used as the accompanying image for the poem "The Frozen Lake" in Selected Poems, a self-edited compilation of Smith's works published in 1962.<ref name=Severin>Severin, Laura. Stevie Smith's Resistant Antics. Univ. of Wisconsin Press (1997) p.71-72.</ref><ref name=Smith>Smith, Stevie. Collected PoemsNew Directions Publishing (1983) pp 393-396.</ref>
Although Ingrid Hotz-Davies suggests that the "drowning man" is Smith herself, she also states that there are problems with reading the poem as a cry for help, due to the humorous tone of the poem, yet at the same time she also notes that the representational form of the poem "may easily be misread as a friendly wave of the hand".<ref name=Hotz-Davies/> The poem's simple diction led Clive James to suggest that Smith attempted to write the poem so that the diction appeared ignorant of poetic convention, yet was carefully crafted to appear more simple than it was.<ref name=James/> James describes the relationship between Smith and the speaker in "Not Waving but Drowning" by saying, "her poems, if they were pills to cure Melancholy, did not work for [Smith]. The best of them, however, worked like charms for everyone else."<ref name=James>James, Clive. As of This Writing. W. W. Norton & Company (2003) p.127.</ref>
References
External links
- Stevie Smith reading "Not Waving But Drowning" (includes poem text)