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“Siren Song” by Margaret Atwood (1974)
This poem, from Atwood’s collection You Are Happy, is another dramatic monologue from a figure in Greek mythology. Circe is one of the half-bird sirens who seduces Odysseus’s men to “leap overboard” (Line 5) and drown. Here, Circe gives advice about “the song / that is irresistible” (Lines 2-3). Speaking to a man, Circe’s speech is similar to Helen’s whispers to her client: “I will tell the secret to you, / to you, only to you. / Come closer. This song / is a cry for help: Help me! / Only you, only you can, you are unique” (Lines 19-24). Circe admits “it is a boring song / but it works every time” (Lines 26-27), showing that she, like Helen, knows how to use her power to seduce men.
“Eurydice” by Margaret Atwood (1984)
First appearing in Interlunar (1984), “Eurydice” is part of a cycle of poems that center on the Greek myth of “Orpheus and Eurydice.” In the myth, the musician and demi-god Orpheus falls in love with the mortal Eurydice. After Eurydice tragically dies, a heartbroken Orpheus makes a bargain with Hades to rescue her from the Underworld.
By Margaret Atwood
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Backdrop Addresses Cowboy
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Cat's Eye
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Death By Landscape
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Hag-Seed: William Shakespeare's The Tempest Retold
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Happy Endings
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Lady Oracle
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Life Before Man
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MaddAddam
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Oryx and Crake
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Rape Fantasies
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Siren Song
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Stone Mattress
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Surfacing
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The Blind Assassin
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The Circle Game
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The Edible Woman
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The Handmaid's Tale
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The Heart Goes Last
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The Landlady
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